![Anne, Queen of Great Britain](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9lL2U5L0RhaGwlMkNfTWljaGFlbF8tX1F1ZWVuX0FubmVfLV9OUEdfNjE4Ny5qcGcvMTYwMHB4LURhaGwlMkNfTWljaGFlbF8tX1F1ZWVuX0FubmVfLV9OUEdfNjE4Ny5qcGc=.jpg )
Anne (6 February 1665 – 1 August 1714) was Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 8 March 1702, and Queen of Great Britain and Ireland following the ratification of the Acts of Union 1707 merging the kingdoms of Scotland and England, until her death in 1714.
Anne | |
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![]() Portrait by Michael Dahl, 1705 | |
Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland | |
Reign | 8 March 1702 – 1 August 1714 |
Coronation | 23 April 1702 |
Predecessor | William III |
Successor | George I |
Born | 6 February 1665 St James's Palace, Westminster, England |
Died | 1 August 1714 (aged 49) Kensington Palace, London, England |
Burial | 24 August 1714 Westminster Abbey |
Spouse | Prince George of Denmark (m. 1683; died 1708) |
Issue more... | Prince William, Duke of Gloucester |
House | Stuart |
Father | James II of England |
Mother | Anne Hyde |
Religion | Anglicanism |
Signature | ![]() |
Anne was born during the reign of her uncle King Charles II. Her father was Charles's younger brother and heir presumptive, James, whose suspected Roman Catholicism was unpopular in England. On Charles's instructions, Anne and her elder sister Mary were raised as Anglicans. Mary married their Dutch Protestant cousin, William III of Orange, in 1677, and Anne married the Lutheran Prince George of Denmark in 1683. On Charles's death in 1685, James succeeded to the throne, but just three years later he was deposed in the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Mary and William became joint monarchs. Although the sisters had been close, disagreements over Anne's finances, status, and choice of acquaintances arose shortly after Mary's accession and they became estranged. William and Mary had no children. After Mary's death in 1694, William reigned alone until his own death in 1702, when Anne succeeded him.
During her reign, Anne favoured moderate Tory politicians, who were more likely to share her Anglican religious views than their opponents, the Whigs. The Whigs grew more powerful during the course of the War of the Spanish Succession, until 1710 when Anne dismissed many of them from office. Her close friendship with Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, turned sour as the result of political differences. The Duchess took revenge with an unflattering description of the Queen in her memoirs, which was widely accepted by historians until Anne was reassessed in the late 20th century.
Anne was plagued by poor health throughout her life, and from her thirties she grew increasingly ill and obese. Despite 17 pregnancies, she died without surviving issue and was the last monarch of the House of Stuart. Under the Act of Settlement 1701, which excluded all Catholics, she was succeeded by her second cousin George I of the House of Hanover.
Early life
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Anne was born at 11:39 p.m. on 6 February 1665 at St James's Palace, London, the fourth child and second daughter of the Duke of York (later King James II and VII), and his first wife, Anne Hyde. Her father was the younger brother of King Charles II, who ruled the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland, and her mother was the daughter of Lord Chancellor Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon. At her Anglican baptism in the Chapel Royal at St James's, her older sister, Mary, was one of her godparents, along with the Duchess of Monmouth and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Gilbert Sheldon. Anne's parents had eight children, but Anne and Mary were the only ones to survive into adulthood.
As a child, Anne had an eye condition, which manifested as excessive watering known as "defluxion". For medical treatment, she was sent to France, where she lived with her paternal grandmother, Henrietta Maria of France, at the Château de Colombes near Paris. Following her grandmother's death in 1669, Anne lived with an aunt, Henrietta Anne, Duchess of Orléans. On the sudden death of her aunt in 1670, Anne returned to England. Her mother died the following year.
As was traditional in the royal family, Anne and her sister were brought up separated from their father in their own establishment at Richmond in Surrey. On the instructions of Charles II, they were raised as Protestants, despite their father being a Catholic. Placed in the care of Colonel Edward and Lady Frances Villiers, their education was focused on the teachings of the Anglican church.Henry Compton, Bishop of London, was appointed as Anne's preceptor.
Around 1671, Anne first made the acquaintance of Sarah Jennings, who later became her close friend and one of her most influential advisors. Jennings married John Churchill (the future Duke of Marlborough) in about 1678. His sister, Arabella, was the Duke of York's mistress, and he was to be Anne's most important general.
In 1673, James's conversion to Catholicism became public, and he married a Catholic princess, Mary of Modena, who was only six and a half years older than Anne. Charles II had no legitimate children, and so James was next in the line of succession, followed by his two surviving daughters from his first marriage, Mary and Anne—as long as he had no son. Over the next ten years, Mary of Modena had ten children, but all were either stillborn or died in infancy, leaving Mary and Anne second and third in the line of succession after their father. There is every indication that, throughout Anne's early life, she and her stepmother got on well together, and James was a conscientious and loving father.
Marriage
![image](https://www.english.nina.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.jpg)
In November 1677, Anne's sister, Mary, married their Dutch first cousin William III of Orange at St James's Palace, but Anne could not attend the wedding because she was confined to her room with smallpox. By the time she recovered, Mary had already left for her new life in the Netherlands. Lady Frances Villiers contracted the disease and died. Anne's aunt Lady Henrietta Hyde (the wife of Laurence Hyde) was appointed as her new governess. A year later, Anne and her stepmother visited Mary in Holland for two weeks.
The Duke and Duchess of York retired to Brussels in March 1679 in the wake of anti-Catholic hysteria fed by the Popish Plot, and Anne visited them from the end of August. In October, all three returned to Britain: Anne to England, and her father and stepmother to Scotland. She joined them at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh from July 1681 until May 1682. It was her last journey outside England.
Anne's second cousin George of Hanover visited London for three months from December 1680, sparking rumours of a potential marriage between them. Historian Edward Gregg dismissed the rumours as ungrounded, as her father was essentially exiled from court, and the Hanoverians planned to marry George to his first cousin Sophia Dorothea of Celle as part of a scheme to unite the Hanoverian inheritance. Other rumours claimed she was courted by Lord Mulgrave, although he denied it. Nevertheless, as a result of the gossip, he was temporarily dismissed from court.
With George of Hanover out of contention as a suitor for Anne, King Charles looked elsewhere for an eligible prince who would be welcomed as a groom by his Protestant subjects but also acceptable to his Catholic ally Louis XIV of France. The Danes were Protestant allies of the French, and Louis XIV was keen on an Anglo-Danish alliance to contain the power of the Dutch. A marriage treaty between Anne and Prince George of Denmark, younger brother of King Christian V, was negotiated by Anne's uncle Laurence Hyde, who had been made Earl of Rochester, and the English Secretary of State for the Northern Department, Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland. Anne and George were second cousins once removed. Anne's father consented to the marriage eagerly because it diminished the influence of his other son-in-law, William of Orange, who was naturally unhappy at the match.
Bishop Compton officiated at Anne and George's wedding on 28 July 1683 in the Chapel Royal at St James's Palace. Although it was an arranged marriage, they were faithful and devoted partners. They were given a set of buildings, known as the Cockpit, in the Palace of Whitehall as their London residence, and Sarah Churchill was appointed one of Anne's ladies of the bedchamber. Within months of the marriage, Anne was pregnant, but the baby was stillborn in May. Anne recovered at the spa town of Tunbridge Wells, and over the next two years, gave birth to two daughters in quick succession: Mary and Anne Sophia.
Accession of James II
When Charles II died in 1685, Anne's father became King James II of England and VII of Scotland. To the consternation of the English people, James began to give Catholics military and administrative offices, in contravention of the Test Acts that were designed to prevent such appointments. Anne shared the general concern, and continued to attend Anglican services. As her sister Mary lived in the Netherlands, Anne and her family were the only members of the royal family attending Protestant religious services in England. When her father tried to get Anne to baptise her youngest daughter into the Catholic faith, Anne burst into tears. "[T]he doctrine of the Church of Rome is wicked and dangerous", she wrote to her sister, "their ceremonies—most of them—plain downright idolatry." Anne became estranged from her father and stepmother, as James moved to weaken the Church of England's power.
In early 1687, within a matter of days, Anne miscarried, her husband caught smallpox, and their two young daughters died of the same infection. Lady Rachel Russell wrote that George and Anne had "taken [the deaths] very heavily ... Sometimes they wept, sometimes they mourned in words; then sat silent, hand in hand; he sick in bed, and she the carefullest nurse to him that can be imagined." Later that year, she suffered another stillbirth.
Public alarm at James's Catholicism increased when his wife, Mary of Modena, became pregnant for the first time since James's accession. In letters to her sister Mary, Anne raised suspicions that the Queen was faking her pregnancy in an attempt to introduce a false heir. She wrote, "they will stick at nothing, be it never so wicked, if it will promote their interest ... there may be foul play intended." Anne had another miscarriage in April 1688, and left London to recuperate in the spa town of Bath.
Anne's stepmother gave birth to a son, James Francis Edward Stuart, on 10 June 1688, and a Catholic succession became more likely. Anne was still at Bath, so she did not witness the birth, which fed the belief that the child was spurious. Anne may have left the capital deliberately to avoid being present, or because she was genuinely ill, but it is also possible that James desired the exclusion of all Protestants, including his daughter, from affairs of state. "I shall never now be satisfied", Anne wrote to her sister Mary, "whether the child be true or false. It may be it is our brother, but God only knows ... one cannot help having a thousand fears and melancholy thoughts, but whatever changes may happen you shall ever find me firm to my religion and faithfully yours."
To dispel rumours of a supposititious child, James had 40 witnesses to the birth attend a Privy Council meeting, but Anne claimed she could not attend because she was pregnant (which she was not) and then declined to read the depositions because it was "not necessary".
Glorious Revolution
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William of Orange invaded England on 5 November 1688 in an action known as the Glorious Revolution, which ultimately deposed King James. Forbidden by James to pay Mary a projected visit in the spring of 1687, Anne corresponded with her and was aware of the plans to invade. On the advice of the Churchills, she refused to side with James after William landed and instead wrote to William on 18 November declaring her approval of his action. Churchill abandoned the unpopular King James on the 24th. George followed suit that night, and in the evening of the following day James issued orders to place Sarah Churchill under house arrest at St James's Palace. Anne and Sarah fled from Whitehall by a back staircase, putting themselves under the care of Bishop Compton. They spent one night in his house, and subsequently arrived at Nottingham on 1 December. Two weeks later and escorted by a large company, Anne arrived at Oxford, where she met George in triumph. "God help me!", lamented James on discovering Anne's desertion on 26 November, "Even my children have forsaken me." On 19 December, Anne returned to London, where she was at once visited by William. James fled to France on the 23rd. Anne showed no concern at the news of her father's flight, and instead merely asked for her usual game of cards. She justified herself by saying that she "was used to play and never loved to do anything that looked like an affected constraint".
In January 1689, a Convention Parliament assembled in England and declared that James had effectively abdicated when he fled, and that the thrones of England and Ireland were therefore vacant. The Parliament or Estates of Scotland took similar action, and William and Mary were declared monarchs of all three realms. The Bill of Rights 1689 and Claim of Right Act 1689 settled the succession. Anne and her descendants were to be in the line of succession after William and Mary, and they were to be followed by any descendants of William by a future marriage. On 24 July 1689, Anne gave birth to a son, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, who, though ill, survived infancy. As William and Mary had no children, it looked as though Anne's son would eventually inherit the Crown.
William and Mary
Soon after their accession, William and Mary rewarded John Churchill by granting him the Earldom of Marlborough and George was made Duke of Cumberland. Anne requested the use of Richmond Palace and a parliamentary allowance. William and Mary refused the first, and unsuccessfully opposed the latter, both of which caused tension between the two sisters. Anne's resentment grew worse when William refused to allow George to serve in the military in an active capacity. The new king and queen feared that Anne's financial independence would weaken their influence over her and allow her to organise a rival political faction. From around this time, at Anne's request she and Sarah Churchill, Lady Marlborough, began to call each other the pet names Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman, respectively, to facilitate a relationship of greater equality between the two when they were alone. In January 1692, suspecting that Marlborough was secretly conspiring with James's followers, the Jacobites, William and Mary dismissed him from all his offices. In a public show of support for the Marlboroughs, Anne took Sarah to a social event at the palace, and refused her sister's request to dismiss Sarah from her household. Lady Marlborough was subsequently removed from the royal household by the Lord Chamberlain, and Anne angrily left her royal lodgings and took up residence at Syon House, the home of the Duke of Somerset. Anne was stripped of her guard of honour; courtiers were forbidden to visit her, and civic authorities were instructed to ignore her. In April, Anne gave birth to a son who died within minutes. Mary visited her, but instead of offering comfort took the opportunity to berate Anne once again for her friendship with Sarah. The sisters never saw each other again. Later that year, Anne moved to Berkeley House in Piccadilly, London, where she had a stillborn daughter in March 1693.
When Mary died of smallpox in 1694, William continued to reign alone. Anne became his heir apparent, since any children he might have by another wife were assigned to a lower place in the line of succession, and the two reconciled publicly. He restored her previous honours, allowed her to reside in St James's Palace, and gave her Mary's jewels, but excluded her from government and refrained from appointing her regent during his absences abroad. Three months later, William restored Marlborough to his offices. With Anne's restoration at court, Berkeley House became a social centre for courtiers who had previously avoided contact with Anne and her husband.
According to James, Anne wrote to him in 1696 requesting his permission to succeed William, and thereafter promising to restore the Crown to James's line at a convenient opportunity; he declined to give his consent. She was probably trying to ensure her own succession by attempting to prevent a direct claim by James.
Act of Settlement
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Anne's final pregnancy ended on 25 January 1700 with a stillbirth. She had been pregnant at least 17 times over as many years, and had miscarried or given birth to stillborn children at least 12 times. Of her five liveborn children, four died before the age of two. Anne experienced bouts of "gout" (pains in her limbs and eventually stomach and head) from at least 1698. Based on her foetal losses and physical symptoms, she may have had systemic lupus erythematosus, or antiphospholipid syndrome. Alternatively, pelvic inflammatory disease could explain why the onset of her symptoms roughly coincided with her penultimate pregnancy. Other suggested causes of her failed pregnancies are listeriosis,diabetes, intrauterine growth retardation, and rhesus incompatibility. Rhesus incompatibility, however, generally worsens with successive pregnancies, and so does not fit the pattern of Anne's pregnancies, as her only son to survive infancy, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, was born after a series of stillbirths. Experts also believe syphilis, porphyria and pelvic deformation to be unlikely as the symptoms are incompatible with her medical history.
Anne's gout rendered her lame for much of her later life. Around the court, she was carried in a sedan chair, or used a wheelchair. Around her estates, she used a one-horse chaise, which she drove herself "furiously like Jehu and a mighty hunter like Nimrod". She gained weight as a result of her sedentary lifestyle; in Sarah's words, "she grew exceeding gross and corpulent. There was something of majesty in her look, but mixed with a gloominess of soul".Sir John Clerk, 1st Baronet, described her in 1706:
under a fit of the gout and in extreme pain and agony, and on this occasion everything about her was much in the same disorder as about the meanest of her subjects. Her face, which was red and spotted, was rendered something frightful by her negligent dress, and the foot affected was tied up with a poultice and some nasty bandages. I was much affected by this sight ...
Anne's sole surviving child, the Duke of Gloucester, died at age 11 on 30 July 1700. She and her husband were "overwhelmed with grief". Anne ordered her household to observe a day of mourning every year on the anniversary of his death. With William childless and Gloucester dead, Anne was the only person remaining in the line of succession established by the Bill of Rights 1689. To address the succession crisis and preclude a Catholic restoration, the Parliament of England enacted the Act of Settlement 1701, which provided that, failing the issue of Anne and of William III by any future marriage, the Crown of England and Ireland would go to Sophia, Electress of Hanover, and her Protestant descendants. Sophia was the granddaughter of James VI and I through his daughter Elizabeth, who was the sister of Anne's grandfather Charles I. Over 50 Catholics with stronger claims were excluded from the line of succession. Anne's father died in September 1701. His widow, the former queen, wrote to Anne to inform her that her father forgave her and to remind her of her promise to seek the restoration of his line, but Anne had already acquiesced to the line of succession created by the Act of Settlement.
Reign
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Anne became queen upon the death of King William III on 8 March 1702, and was immediately popular. In her first speech to the English Parliament, on 11 March, she distanced herself from her late Dutch brother-in-law and said, "As I know my heart to be entirely English, I can very sincerely assure you there is not anything you can expect or desire from me which I shall not be ready to do for the happiness and prosperity of England."
Soon after her accession, Anne appointed her husband Lord High Admiral, giving him nominal control of the Royal Navy. Anne gave control of the army to Lord Marlborough, whom she appointed Captain-General. Marlborough also received numerous honours from the Queen; he was created a Knight of the Garter and was elevated to the rank of duke. The Duchess of Marlborough was appointed Groom of the Stool, Mistress of the Robes, and Keeper of the Privy Purse.
Anne was crowned on St George's Day, 23 April 1702. Affected by gout, she was carried to Westminster Abbey in an open sedan chair, with a low back to permit her train to flow out behind her. On 4 May, England became embroiled in the War of the Spanish Succession, in which England, Austria, and the Dutch Republic fought against France and Bourbon Spain.Charles II of Spain had died childless in 1700, and the succession was disputed by two claimants: the Habsburg Archduke Charles of Austria and the Bourbon Philip, Duke of Anjou.
She took a lively interest in affairs of state, and was a patron of theatre, poetry and music. She subsidised George Frideric Handel with £200 a year. She sponsored high-quality medals as rewards for political or military achievements. They were produced at the Mint by Isaac Newton and John Croker. She knighted Newton when she visited Cambridge in 1705.
Acts of Union
While Ireland was subordinate to the English Crown and Wales formed part of the kingdom of England, Scotland remained an independent sovereign state with its own parliament and laws. The Act of Settlement 1701, passed by the English Parliament, applied in the kingdoms of England and Ireland but not Scotland, where a strong minority wished to preserve the Stuart dynasty and its right of inheritance to the throne. Anne had declared it "very necessary" to conclude a union of England and Scotland in her first speech to the English Parliament, and a joint Anglo-Scots commission met at her former residence, the Cockpit, to discuss terms in October 1702. The negotiations broke up in early February 1703 having failed to reach an agreement. The Estates of Scotland responded to the Act of Settlement by passing the Act of Security, which gave the Estates the power, if the Queen had no further children, to choose the next Scottish monarch from among the Protestant descendants of the royal line of Scotland. The individual chosen by the Estates could not be the same person who came to the English throne, unless England granted full freedom of trade to Scottish merchants. At first, Anne withheld royal assent to the act, but she granted it the following year when the Estates threatened to withhold supply, endangering Scottish support for England's wars.
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In its turn, the English Parliament responded with the Alien Act 1705, which threatened to impose economic sanctions and declare Scottish subjects aliens in England, unless Scotland either repealed the Act of Security or moved to unite with England. The Estates chose the latter option; the English Parliament agreed to repeal the Alien Act, and new commissioners were appointed by Queen Anne in early 1706 to negotiate the terms of a union. The articles of union approved by the commissioners were presented to Anne on 23 July 1706 and ratified by the Scottish and English Parliaments on 16 January and 6 March 1707, respectively. Under the Acts of Union, England and Scotland were united into a single kingdom called Great Britain, with one parliament, on 1 May 1707. A consistent and ardent supporter of union despite opposition on both sides of the border, Anne attended a thanksgiving service in St Paul's Cathedral. The Scot Sir John Clerk, 1st Baronet, who also attended, wrote, "nobody on this occasion appeared more sincerely devout and thankful than the Queen herself".
Two-party politics
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Anne's reign was marked by the further development of a two-party system. In general, the Tories were supportive of the Anglican church and favoured the landed interest of the country gentry, while the Whigs were aligned with commercial interests and Protestant Dissenters. As a committed Anglican, Anne was inclined to favour the Tories.Her first ministry was predominantly Tory, and contained such High Tories as Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham, and her uncle Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester. It was headed by Lord Treasurer Lord Godolphin and Anne's favourite the Duke of Marlborough, who were considered moderate Tories, along with the Speaker of the House of Commons, Robert Harley.
Anne supported the Occasional Conformity Bill of 1702, which was promoted by the Tories and opposed by the Whigs. The bill aimed to disqualify Protestant Dissenters from public office by closing a loophole in the Test Acts, legislation that restricted public office to Anglican conformists. The existing law permitted nonconformists to take office if they took Anglican communion once a year. Anne's husband was placed in an unfortunate position when Anne forced him to vote for the bill, even though, being a Lutheran, he was an occasional conformist himself. The Whigs successfully blocked the bill for the duration of the parliamentary session. Anne reinstituted the traditional religious practice of touching for the king's evil that had been eschewed by William as papist superstition. After the Great Storm of 1703, Anne declared a general fast to implore God "to pardon the crying sins of this nation which had drawn down this sad judgement". The Occasional Conformity Bill was revived in the wake of the storm, but Anne withheld support, fearing its reintroduction was a ruse to cause a political quarrel. Once again it failed. A third attempt to introduce the bill as an amendment to a money bill in November 1704 was also thwarted.
The Whigs vigorously supported the War of the Spanish Succession and became even more influential after the Duke of Marlborough won a great victory at the Battle of Blenheim in 1704. Many of the High Tories, who opposed British involvement in the land war against France, were removed from office. Godolphin, Marlborough, and Harley, who had replaced Nottingham as Secretary of State for the Northern Department, formed a ruling "triumvirate". They were forced to rely more and more on support from the Whigs, and particularly from the Whig Junto—Lords Somers, Halifax, Orford, Wharton and Sunderland—whom Anne disliked. Sarah, the Duchess of Marlborough, incessantly badgered the Queen to appoint more Whigs and reduce the power of the Tories, whom she considered little better than Jacobites, and the Queen became increasingly discontented with her.
In 1706, Godolphin and the Marlboroughs forced Anne to accept Lord Sunderland, a Junto Whig and the Marlboroughs' son-in-law, as Harley's colleague as Secretary of State for the Southern Department. Although this strengthened the ministry's position in Parliament, it weakened the ministry's position with the Queen, as Anne became increasingly irritated with Godolphin and with her former favourite, the Duchess of Marlborough, for supporting Sunderland and other Whig candidates for vacant government and church positions. The Queen turned for private advice to Harley, who was uncomfortable with Marlborough and Godolphin's turn towards the Whigs. She also turned to Abigail Hill, a woman of the bedchamber whose influence grew as Anne's relationship with Sarah deteriorated. Abigail was related to both Harley and the Duchess, but was politically closer to Harley, and acted as an intermediary between him and the Queen.
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The division within the ministry came to a head on 8 February 1708, when Godolphin and the Marlboroughs insisted that the Queen had to either dismiss Harley or do without their services. When the Queen seemed to hesitate, Marlborough and Godolphin refused to attend a cabinet meeting. Harley attempted to lead business without his former colleagues, and several of those present including Charles Seymour, Duke of Somerset refused to participate until they returned. Her hand forced, the Queen dismissed Harley.
The following month, Anne's Catholic half-brother, James Francis Edward Stuart, attempted to land in Scotland with French assistance in an attempt to establish himself as king. Anne withheld royal assent from the Scottish Militia Bill 1708 in case the militia raised in Scotland was disloyal and sided with the Jacobites. She was the last British sovereign to veto a parliamentary bill, although her action was barely commented upon at the time. The invasion fleet never landed and was chased away by British ships commanded by Sir George Byng. As a result of the Jacobite invasion scare, support for the Tories fell and the Whigs were able to secure a majority in the 1708 British general election.
The Duchess of Marlborough was angered when Abigail moved into rooms at Kensington Palace that Sarah considered her own, though she rarely if ever used them. In July 1708, she came to court with a bawdy poem written by a Whig propagandist, probably Arthur Maynwaring, that implied a lesbian relationship between Anne and Abigail. The Duchess wrote to Anne telling her she had damaged her reputation by conceiving "a great passion for such a woman ... strange and unaccountable". Sarah thought Abigail had risen above her station, writing "I never thought her education was such as to make her fit company for a great queen. Many people have liked the humour of their chambermaids and have been very kind to them, but 'tis very uncommon to hold a private correspondence with them and put them upon the foot of a friend." While some modern commentators have concluded Anne was a lesbian, most have rejected this analysis. In the opinion of Anne's biographers, she considered Abigail nothing more than a trusted servant and was a woman of strong traditional beliefs who was devoted to her husband.
At a thanksgiving service for a victory at the Battle of Oudenarde, Anne did not wear the jewels that Sarah had selected for her. At the door of St Paul's Cathedral, they had an argument that culminated in Sarah offending the Queen by telling her to be quiet. Anne was dismayed. When Sarah forwarded an unrelated letter from her husband to Anne, with a covering note continuing the argument, Anne wrote back pointedly, "After the commands you gave me on the thanksgiving day of not answering you, I should not have troubled you with these lines, but to return the Duke of Marlborough's letter safe into your hands, and for the same reason do not say anything to that, nor to yours which enclosed it."
Death of Prince George
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Anne was devastated by Prince George's death in October 1708, and it proved a turning point in her relationship with the Duchess of Marlborough. The Duchess arrived at Kensington Palace shortly before George died, and after his death insisted that Anne leave Kensington for St James's Palace against her wishes. Anne resented the Duchess's intrusive actions, which included removing a portrait of George from the Queen's bedchamber and then refusing to return it in the belief that it was natural "to avoid seeing of papers or anything that belonged to one that one loved when they were just dead".
The Whigs used George's death to their own advantage. The leadership of the Admiralty was unpopular among the Whig leaders, who had blamed Prince George and his deputy George Churchill (who was Marlborough's brother) for mismanagement of the navy. With Whigs now dominant in Parliament, and Anne distraught at the loss of her husband, they forced her to accept the Junto leaders Lords Somers and Wharton into the cabinet. Anne, however, insisted on carrying out the duties of Lord High Admiral herself, without appointing a member of the government to take George's place. Undeterred, the Junto demanded the appointment of the Earl of Orford, another member of the Junto and one of the prince's leading critics, as First Lord of the Admiralty. Anne appointed the moderate Earl of Pembroke, on 29 November 1708. Pressure mounted on Pembroke, Godolphin and the Queen from the dissatisfied Junto Whigs, and Pembroke resigned after less than a year in office. Another month of arguments followed before the Queen finally consented to put Orford in control of the Admiralty as First Lord in November 1709.
Sarah continued to berate Anne for her friendship with Abigail and, in October 1709, Anne wrote to the Duke of Marlborough asking that his wife "leave off teasing & tormenting me & behave herself with the decency she ought both to her friend and Queen". On Maundy Thursday 6 April 1710, Anne and Sarah saw each other for the last time. According to Sarah, the Queen was taciturn and formal, repeating the same phrases—"Whatever you have to say you may put in writing" and "You said you desired no answer, and I shall give you none"—over and over.
War of the Spanish Succession
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As the expensive War of the Spanish Succession grew unpopular, so did the Whig administration. The impeachment of Henry Sacheverell, a high church Tory Anglican who had preached anti-Whig sermons, led to further public discontent. Anne thought Sacheverell ought to be punished for questioning the Glorious Revolution, but that his punishment should only be a mild one to prevent further public commotion. In London, riots broke out in support of Sacheverell, but the only troops available to quell the disturbances were Anne's guards, and Secretary of State Sunderland was reluctant to use them and leave the Queen less protected. Anne declared God would be her guard and ordered Sunderland to redeploy her troops. In line with Anne's views, Sacheverell was convicted, but his sentence—suspension of preaching for three years—was so light as to render the trial a mockery.
The Queen, increasingly disdainful of the Marlboroughs and her ministry, finally took the opportunity to dismiss Sunderland in June 1710. Godolphin followed in August. The Junto Whigs were removed from office, although Marlborough, for the moment, remained as commander of the army. In their place, she appointed a new ministry headed by Harley, which began to seek peace with France. Unlike the Whigs, Harley and his ministry were ready to compromise by giving Spain to the Bourbon claimant, Philip of Anjou, in return for commercial concessions. In the parliamentary elections that soon followed his appointment, Harley, aided by government patronage, secured a large Tory majority. In January 1711, Anne forced Sarah to resign her court offices, and Abigail took over as Keeper of the Privy Purse. Harley was stabbed by a disgruntled French refugee, the Marquis de Guiscard, in March, and Anne wept at the thought he would die. He recovered slowly. Godolphin's death from natural causes in September 1712 reduced Anne to tears; she blamed their estrangement on the Marlboroughs.
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The elder brother of Archduke Charles, Emperor Joseph I, died in April 1711 and Charles succeeded him in Austria, Hungary and the Holy Roman Empire. To also give him the Spanish throne was no longer in Britain's interests, but the proposed Peace of Utrecht submitted to Parliament for ratification did not go as far as the Whigs wanted to curb Bourbon ambitions. In the House of Commons, the Tory majority was unassailable, but the same was not true in the House of Lords. The Whigs secured the support of the Earl of Nottingham against the treaty by promising to support his Occasional Conformity bill. Seeing a need for decisive action to erase the anti-peace majority in the House of Lords, and seeing no alternative, Anne reluctantly created twelve new peers, even though such a mass creation of peers was unprecedented. Abigail's husband, Samuel Masham, was made a baron, although Anne protested to Harley that she "never had any design to make a great lady of [Abigail], and should lose a useful servant". On the same day, Marlborough was dismissed as commander of the army. The peace treaty was ratified and Britain's military involvement in the War of the Spanish Succession ended.
By signing the Treaty of Utrecht, Louis XIV of France recognised the Hanoverian succession in Britain. Nevertheless, gossip that Anne and her ministers favoured the succession of her half-brother rather than the Hanoverians continued, despite Anne's denials in public and in private. The rumours were fed by her consistent refusals to permit any of the Hanoverians to visit or move to England, and by the intrigues of Harley and the Tory Secretary of State Lord Bolingbroke, who were in separate and secret discussions with her half-brother about a possible Stuart restoration until early 1714.
Death
Anne was unable to walk between January and July 1713. At Christmas, she was feverish, and lay unconscious for hours, leading to rumours of her impending death. She recovered, but was seriously ill again in March. By July, Anne had lost confidence in Harley; his secretary recorded that Anne told the cabinet "that he neglected all business; that he was seldom to be understood; that when he did explain himself, she could not depend upon the truth of what he said; that he never came to her at the time she appointed; that he often came drunk; [and] last, to crown all, he behaved himself towards her with ill manner, indecency and disrespect." On 27 July 1714, during Parliament's summer recess, she dismissed Harley as Lord Treasurer. Despite failing health, which her doctors blamed on the emotional strain of matters of state, she attended two late-night cabinet meetings that failed to determine Harley's successor. A third meeting was cancelled when she became too ill to attend. She was rendered unable to speak by a stroke on 30 July 1714, the anniversary of Gloucester's death, and on the advice of the Privy Council handed the treasurer's staff of office to Whig grandee Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury.
Anne died around 7:30 a.m. on 1 August 1714.John Arbuthnot, one of her doctors, thought her death was a release from a life of ill-health and tragedy; he wrote to Jonathan Swift, "I believe sleep was never more welcome to a weary traveller than death was to her." She was buried beside her husband and children in the Henry VII Chapel on the South Aisle of Westminster Abbey on 24 August.
Succession
The Electress Sophia had died on 28 May, two months before Anne, so the Electress's son, George, Elector of Hanover, succeeded pursuant to the Act of Settlement 1701. The possible Catholic claimants, including Anne's half-brother, James Francis Edward Stuart, were ignored. The Elector's accession was relatively stable: a Jacobite rising in 1715 failed. Marlborough was reinstated, and the Tory ministers were replaced by Whigs.
Legacy
The Duchess of Marlborough "unduly disparaged" Anne in her memoirs, and her prejudiced recollections persuaded many early biographers that Anne was "a weak, irresolute woman beset by bedchamber quarrels and deciding high policy on the basis of personalities". The Duchess wrote of Anne:
She certainly meant well and was not a fool, but nobody can maintain that she was wise, nor entertaining in conversation. She was ignorant in everything but what the parsons had taught her when a child ... Being very ignorant, very fearful, with very little judgement, it is easy to be seen she might mean well, being surrounded with so many artful people, who at last compassed their designs to her dishonour.
Historians have since viewed Anne more favourably. In his biography of 1980, Edward Gregg presents the Queen as a woman of invincible stubbornness, who was the central figure of her age. Gregg's argument depicts her reign as:
a period of significant progress for the country: Britain became a major military power on land, the union of England and Scotland created a united kingdom of Great Britain, and the economic and political base for the golden age of the 18th century was established. However, the Queen herself has received little credit for these achievements and has long been depicted as a weak and ineffectual monarch, dominated by her advisers.
In the opinion of modern historians, traditional assessments of Anne as fat, constantly pregnant, under the influence of favourites, and lacking political astuteness or interest may derive from sexist prejudices against women. Author David Green noted, "Hers was not, as used to be supposed, petticoat government. She had considerable power; yet time and time again she had to capitulate." Gregg concluded that Anne was often able to impose her will, even though, as a woman in an age of male dominance and preoccupied by her health, her reign was marked by an increase in the influence of ministers and a decrease in the influence of the Crown. She attended more cabinet meetings than any of her predecessors or successors, and presided over an age of artistic, literary, scientific, economic and political advancement that was made possible by the stability and prosperity of her reign. In architecture, Sir John Vanbrugh constructed Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard.Queen Anne-style architecture and Queen Anne-style furniture were named after her. Writers such as Daniel Defoe, Alexander Pope, and Jonathan Swift flourished.Henry Wise laid out new gardens at Blenheim, Kensington, Windsor and St James's. The union of England and Scotland, which Anne had fervently supported, created Europe's largest free trade area. The political and diplomatic achievements of Anne's governments, and the absence of constitutional conflict between monarch and parliament during her reign, indicate that she chose ministers and exercised her prerogatives wisely.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles and styles
- 6 February 1665 – 28 July 1683: Her Highness The Lady Anne
- 28 July 1683 – 8 March 1702: Her Royal Highness The Princess Anne of Denmark
- 8 March 1702 – 1 August 1714: Her Majesty The Queen
The official style of Anne before 1707 was "Anne, by the Grace of God, Queen of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc." After the union, her style was "Anne, by the Grace of God, Queen of Great Britain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc." In line with other monarchs of England between 1340 and 1800, Anne was styled "Queen of France", but did not actually reign in France.
Arms
As queen regnant, Anne's coat of arms before the union were the Stuart royal arms, in use since 1603: Quarterly; I and IV grandquarterly, Azure three fleurs-de-lis Or (for France) and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England); II, Or, a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); III, Azure, a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland). In 1702, Anne adopted the motto semper eadem ("always the same"), the same motto used by Queen Elizabeth I. The Acts of Union declared that: "the Ensigns Armorial of the said United Kingdom be such as Her Majesty shall appoint". In 1707, the union was heraldically expressed by the impalement, or placing side by side in the same quarter, of the arms of England and Scotland, which had previously been in different quarters. The new arms were: Quarterly; I and IV, Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England) impaling Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); II, Azure, three fleurs-de-lis Or (for France); III, Azure, a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland). In Scotland, a separate form of arms was used on seals until the Act of Union.
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Coat of arms of Anne as Princess of Denmark | Coat of arms of Anne as Queen of England from 1702 to 1707 | Coat of arms of Anne as Queen of Great Britain from 1707 to 1714 |
Pregnancies and issue
Anne had seventeen pregnancies, of which five were live births. None of her children survived to adulthood.
Child | Birth | Death | Burial | Notes |
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Stillborn daughter | 12 May 1684 London | 13 May 1684 Westminster Abbey | ||
Mary | 2 June 1685 Palace of Whitehall | 8 February 1687 Windsor Castle | 10 February 1687 Westminster Abbey | Christened 2 June 1685 by the Bishop of London; styled "the Lady Mary". Died of smallpox. Mary, Anne Sophia (Mary's younger sister), and their father all becoming ill at Windsor Castle in early 1687. |
Anne Sophia | 12 May 1686 Windsor Castle | 2 February 1687 Windsor Castle or Whitehall | 4 February 1687 Westminster Abbey | Christened by the Bishop of Durham, with Lady Churchill one of the godmothers; styled "the Lady Anne Sophia". |
Miscarriage | 21 January 1687 | |||
Stillborn son | 22 October 1687 Whitehall | 22 October 1687 Westminster Abbey | Anne gave birth at seven months, but the baby "lay dead a full month within her". | |
Miscarriage | 16 April 1688 | |||
Prince William, Duke of Gloucester | 24 July 1689 Hampton Court Palace | 30 July 1700 Windsor Castle | 9 August 1700 Westminster Abbey | Died of unclear causes at age 11. |
Mary | 14 October 1690 St James's Palace | 14 October 1690 Westminster Abbey | She was two months premature, and lived about two hours. | |
George | 17 April 1692 Syon House | 18 April 1692 Westminster Abbey | He lived only for a few minutes, just long enough to be baptised; styled "Lord George". | |
Stillborn daughter | 23 March 1693 Berkeley House | 24 March 1693 Westminster Abbey | ||
Miscarriage | 21 January 1694 | Modern historians Edward Gregg and Alison Weir do not agree on whether it was a son or possibly a daughter. Contemporary chronicler Narcissus Luttrell wrote only that Anne "miscarried of a dead child". | ||
Miscarried daughter | 17 or 18 February 1696 | |||
Miscarriage | 20 September 1696 | Luttrell said Anne "miscarried of a son".Nathaniel Johnston told Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Huntingdon, in a letter dated 24 October 1696, "Her Royal Highness miscarried of two children, the one of seven months' growth, the other of two or three months, as her physicians and midwife judged: one was born the day after the other." If so, the smaller foetus was probably a blighted twin or fetus papyraceus. | ||
Miscarriage | 25 March 1697 | |||
Miscarriage | early December 1697 | According to Saunière de L'Hermitage, the Dutch resident in London, Anne miscarried twins who were "too early to determine their sex". Other sources say the pregnancy ended in a stillborn son, or "two male children, at least as far as could be recognised". | ||
Stillborn son | 15 September 1698 Windsor Castle | St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle | James Vernon wrote to Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury, that Anne's physician thought the foetus "might have been dead 8 or 10 days". | |
Stillborn son | 24 January 1700 St James's | Westminster Abbey | Contemporary sources say Anne gave birth at seven and a half months, after the foetus had been dead for a month. |
Genealogical table
The British monarchs of the House of Stuart, their relations, and the transition to the Hanovers | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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See also
- Early-18th-century Whig plots
- Queen Anne's Bounty, 1704 financial scheme in support of poorer clergy
- Queen Anne's Revenge, 18th-century pirate ship
Notes
- Queen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1 May 1707
- All dates in this article are in the Old Style Julian calendar used in Great Britain throughout Anne's lifetime, except that years are assumed to start on 1 January rather than 25 March, which was the English New Year.
- Professor Valerie Traub writes, "Although this scandal features prominently in biographies of the Queen, the charges generally are dismissed as the hysterical vindictiveness of a power-hungry Duchess".
- 8 June in the New Style Gregorian calendar in use in Hanover since 1700.
References
Citations
- Curtis, pp. 12–17; Gregg, p. 4
- Gregg, p. 4
- Green, p. 17; Gregg, p. 6; Waller, pp. 293–295
- Curtis, pp. 19–21; Green, p. 20; Gregg, p. 6
- Curtis, pp. 21–23; Gregg, p. 8; Somerset, pp. 11–13; Waller, p. 295
- Gregg, p. 5
- Curtis, pp. 23–24; Gregg, p. 13; Somerset, p. 20
- Green, p. 21; Gregg, p. 5
- Curtis, p. 28; Gregg, p. 13; Waller, p. 296
- Somerset, p. 20
- Curtis, p. 27; Green, p. 21; Gregg, p. 28
- Curtis, p. 34; Green, p. 29; Gregg, p. 28
- Weir, pp. 260–261
- Somerset, pp. 22–23
- Somerset, pp. 8–9
- Curtis, p. 30; Green, p. 27; Gregg, p. 17
- Green, p. 28; Gregg, p. 17; Somerset, p. 29
- Green, p. 28: Gregg, p. 20
- Green, p. 29; Gregg, p. 22; Somerset, p. 34
- Green, p. 32; Gregg, p. 26; Somerset, p. 35
- Green, p. 28
- Curtis, pp. 35–37; Green, p. 31; Gregg, p. 24; Somerset, pp. 34, 36
- Gregg, pp. 24–25
- Curtis, p. 37; Green, pp. 32–33; Gregg, p. 27; Somerset, p. 37
- Somerset, p. 40
- Gregg, p. 32
- Gregg, p. 33; Somerset, pp. 41–42
- Gregg, pp. 33–34; Somerset, p. 43
- Curtis, pp. 41–42; Green, pp. 34–35; Gregg, pp. 32–35; Somerset, p. 44
- Curtis, p. 42; Green, p. 34; Gregg, p. 35; Somerset, pp. 41, 44
- Curtis, p. 43; Green, p. 36; Gregg, p. 34; Somerset, p. 49
- Gregg, p. 36; Somerset, p. 56
- Weir, p. 268
- Somerset, pp. 61, 64
- Waller, p. 300
- Green, p. 38
- Quoted in Green, p. 39; Gregg, p. 43 and Somerset, p. 21
- Somerset, pp. 65, 74–77
- Green, p. 39; Gregg, p. 47; Waller, p. 301
- Curtis, p. 55; Gregg, p. 52; Somerset, pp. 80–82
- Letter dated 14 March 1688, quoted in Gregg, p. 54 and Waller, p. 303
- Somerset, pp. 86–87; Waller, pp. 303–304
- Ward, pp. 241–242
- Waller, p. 304
- Nenner, p. 243
- Yorke, pp. 65–68
- Quoted in Green, p. 43
- Somerset, p. 95
- Gregg, pp. 62–63; Waller, p. 305
- Green, p. 39; Gregg, p. 47; Somerset, p. 74
- Gregg, p. 60
- Green, p. 47; Gregg, p. 63
- Gregg, p. 64
- Gregg, p. 65
- Gregg, pp. 65–66
- Green, pp. 45–47; Gregg, p. 67
- Gregg, p. 66
- Gregg, p. 68; Somerset, p. 105
- Lord Clarendon's diary, quoted in Green, p. 49
- Ward, pp. 250–251, 291–292
- Green, p. 52; Gregg, p. 69
- Curtis, p. 72; Green, pp. 54–55
- Green, pp. 53–54; Gregg, pp. 76–79
- Curtis, pp. 75–76; Green, p. 58; Gregg, p. 80
- Gregg, pp. 78–79
- Gregg, p. 81; Somerset, p. 52
- Gregg, p. 81; Somerset, p. 124
- Curtis, pp. 78–80; Green, pp. 59–60; Gregg, pp. 84–87; Somerset, pp. 130–132
- Green, p. 62; Gregg, p. 87; Somerset, p. 132
- Green, p. 62; Gregg, pp. 88–91, 96
- Curtis, p. 81; Green, pp. 62–63; Gregg, p. 90; Somerset, pp. 134–135
- Somerset, p. 146
- Curtis, p. 84; Green, pp. 66–67; Gregg, pp. 102–103
- Somerset, p. 149
- Gregg, pp. 105–106; Somerset, pp. 151–152
- Gregg, p. 104
- Somerset, p. 151
- Gregg, p. 108; Somerset, pp. 153–154
- Gregg, p. 122
- Green, p. 335; Gregg, pp. 100, 120; Weir, pp. 268–269
- Green, pp. 79, 336
- Emson, H. E. (23 May 1992). "For The Want Of An Heir: The Obstetrical History Of Queen Anne", British Medical Journal, vol. 304, no. 6838, pp. 1365–1366 (subscription required)
- Somerset, pp. 80, 295
- Green, p. 338
- Saxbe, W. B., Jr. (January 1972). "Listeria monocytogenes and Queen Anne", Pediatrics, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 97–101
- Waller, p. 310
- Green, pp. 337–338; Somerset, p. 79; Waller, pp. 310–311
- Curtis, pp. 47–49; Green, pp. 337–338
- Curtis, p. 84
- Gregg, p. 330
- Jonathan Swift quoted in Green, pp. 101–102 and Gregg, p. 343
- Green, p. 154
- Curtis, p. 146; Green, pp. 154–155; Gregg, p. 231
- Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 674; Somerset, p. 163
- Green, p. 80
- Somerset, p. 165
- Green, pp. 86–87; Waller, p. 312
- Green, p. 90; Waller, p. 312
- Green, p. 91; Waller, p. 313
- Green, p. 94; Gregg, p. 160
- Green, p. 94; Somerset, p. 174; Waller, p. 315; Ward, p. 460
- Green, p. 95; Waller, p. 314
- Curtis, p. 97; Green, pp. 95–96; Gregg, p. 154; Somerset, p. 187
- Curtis, p. 97; Green, p. 96
- Green, p. 97; Gregg, p. 158
- Curtis, p. 101; Green, pp. 85–86; Gregg, p. 125
- Somerset, pp. 229–230
- Hone, Joseph (2016). "Isaac Newton and the Medals for Queen Anne". Huntington Library Quarterly. 79 (1): 119–148. doi:10.1353/hlq.2016.0003. S2CID 155499114.
- Gregg, p. 197
- Gregg, pp. 130–131
- Somerset, p. 212
- Somerset, p. 214
- "Negotiations for Union 1702–03". UK Parliament. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
- Curtis, p. 145; Somerset, p. 257
- Green, p. 133
- Somerset, pp. 269–270
- Green, p. 134; Somerset, pp. 277–278
- Somerset, p. 296
- Gregg, pp. 202, 214
- Somerset, p. 297
- Gregg, p. 239; Somerset, pp. 315–316
- Gregg, p. 240
- Clerk's memoirs, quoted in Gregg, p. 240, and Somerset, pp. 316–317
- Curtis, pp. 102–104; Gregg, pp. 133–134; Somerset, pp. 189–199
- Somerset, pp. 201–203; Waller, p. 318
- Gregg, p. 135
- Curtis, p. 107; Green, pp. 108–109; Gregg, pp. 162–163
- Green, p. 105; Somerset, p. 226; Waller, pp. 316–317
- Green, p. 121
- Green, p. 122
- Curtis, p. 116; Green, p. 122; Gregg, p. 177
- Gregg, pp. 192–194; Somerset, pp. 275–276
- Gregg, p. 196
- Green, p. 129
- Curtis, pp. 134, 138–139; Green, pp. 117, 155, 172; Gregg, pp. 134, 218–219
- Gregg, pp. 174–175, 188–193; Somerset, pp. 245–246, 258, 272–274
- Green, p. 155; Gregg, pp. 219–230; Somerset, pp. 301–311
- Green, p. 156; Gregg, pp. 230–231, 241–246; Somerset, pp. 318–321
- Curtis, p. 152; Green, pp. 166–168; Waller, p. 324
- Gregg, p. 236–237; Somerset, p. 324
- Green, pp. 182–183; Gregg, pp. 258–259; Somerset, pp. 340–341
- Green, p. 183; Gregg, p. 259; Somerset, p. 341
- Curtis, p. 157; Green, p. 186; Gregg, pp. 261–262; Somerset, p. 343
- Curtis, p. 157
- Curtis, p. 157; Gregg, p. 144
- Curtis, p. 158; Green, p. 186; Gregg, p. 262; Somerset, p. 345
- Gregg, p. 263
- Gregg, pp. 273–274; Somerset, pp. 347–348
- Gregg, p. 275; Somerset, p. 361
- Gregg, pp. 275–276; Somerset, pp. 360–361; Waller, pp. 324–325
- Gregg, pp. 275–276; Somerset, p. 362; Waller, pp. 324–325
- Somerset, pp. 353–354
- e.g. Kendall, pp. 165–176
- Traub, p. 157
- Gregg, p. 237; Somerset, p. 363
- Somerset, pp. 363–364
- Curtis, pp. 162–163; Green, pp. 195–196; Gregg, p. 276; Somerset, pp. 364–365
- Curtis, pp. 163–164; Green, p. 196; Gregg, p. 277; Somerset, p. 365
- Curtis, pp. 163–164; Green, p. 196; Gregg, p. 277
- Curtis, pp. 165–168; Green, p. 198; Gregg, p. 280; Somerset, pp. 372–374
- Green, p. 199; Somerset, p. 370
- Green, p. 202
- Green, pp. 175–176; Gregg, pp. 254, 266
- Gregg, p. 284
- Green, pp. 210–214; Gregg, pp. 292–294; Somerset, pp. 389–390; Waller, p. 325
- Curtis, p. 173; Green, pp. 307–308; Gregg, pp. 221–222
- Gregg, p. 298
- Green, pp. 217–218; Gregg, pp. 305–306
- Green, p. 220; Gregg, p. 306; Somerset, pp. 403–404
- Curtis, p. 176; Gregg, pp. 313–314; Somerset, pp. 414–415
- Gregg, p. 335
- Gregg, pp. 322–324
- Green, pp. 238–241; Gregg, pp. 328–331; Somerset, pp. 435–437
- Green, p. 244; Gregg, p. 337; Somerset, pp. 439–440
- Green, p. 274
- Gregg, pp. 337–343
- Curtis, p. 189; Green, p. 258; Gregg, p. 343; Somerset, pp. 458–460
- Curtis, p. 190; Green, p. 263; Gregg, pp. 349–351; Somerset, pp. 463–465
- Green, p. 263; Somerset, p. 465
- Gregg, pp. 349–351; Somerset, pp. 464–465
- Green, p. 263; Gregg, p. 350
- Gregg, pp. 358, 361
- Gregg, p. 361
- Green, pp. 272–284; Gregg, pp. 363–366
- Curtis, p. 193
- Gregg, pp. 375–377; Somerset, pp. 505–507
- Curtis, p. 193; Green, p. 282
- Curtis, p. 193; Green, pp. 294–295
- Green, p. 296; Gregg, p. 374; Somerset, p. 502
- Green, p. 300; Gregg, p. 378
- Harley's secretary Erasmus Lewis writing to Jonathan Swift, quoted in Gregg, p. 391 and Somerset, p. 524
- Green, p. 318; Gregg, pp. 390–391
- Gregg, pp. 391–392; Somerset, pp. 525–526
- Green, pp. 321–322; Somerset, p. 527; Waller, p. 328
- Gregg, pp. 392–394; Somerset, p. 528
- Quoted in Gregg, p. 394
- "No. 5254". The London Gazette. 24 August 1714. p. 1.
- Curtis, p. 201
- Green, p. 327
- Gregg, p. 399
- Somerset, p. 501
- Gregg, p. 401
- Green, p. 330
- Hensbergen, Claudine; Bernard, Stephen (2014) "Introduction" Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, vol. 37, no. 2, p. 140
- Waller, p. 313; see also Somerset, pp. 541–543 for a similar view.
- Green, p. 14
- Gregg, p. 404
- Green, p. 97; Gregg, p. 141
- Curtis, p. 204
- Curtis, pp. 124–131
- Gregg, p. 132
- Curtis, pp. 131, 136–137
- Gregg, p. 405
- "Quick Guide: Act of Union". BBC News. 15 January 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
- Waller, pp. 313, 317, 328
- "No. 1065". The London Gazette. 31 January 1675. p. 2. "No. 1143". The London Gazette. 30 October 1676. p. 1.
- "No. 2361". The London Gazette. 5 July 1688. p. 1. "No. 2365". The London Gazette. 19 July 1688. p. 2.
- Wallis, John Eyre Winstanley (1921). English Regnal Years and Titles: Hand-lists, Easter dates, etc. London: Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge. pp. 62–63.
- Weir, p. 286
- Pinches and Pinches, pp. 194–195
- "Union with England Act 1707: Section I". The National Archives. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
- "Union with England Act 1707: Section XXIV". The National Archives. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
- Green, p. 335; Gregg, p. 36; Somerset, p. 56; Weir, p. 268
- Chester, p. 209
- "No. 2216". The London Gazette. 10–14 February 1686. p. 2.
- Chester, p. 217
- Ward, pp. 441–474
- Gregg, pp. 46–47
- "No. 2214". The London Gazette. 3–7 February 1686. p. 2.
- Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series: James II (1964). London: HMSO, vol. II, p. 347; Gregg, p. 46; Somerset, p. 71; Weir, p. 268
- Gregg, p. 52
- Chester, p. 219; Weir, p. 268
- Green, p. 335; Gregg, p. 55; Somerset, p. 86; Weir, p. 268
- Green, pp. 54, 335; Gregg, pp. 72, 120; Weir, p. 268
- Chester, pp. 246–247
- Waller, Maureen (2002). Ungrateful daughters : the Stuart princesses who stole their father's crown. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 352. ISBN 0-340-79461-5.
- Chester, p. 226
- Green, p. 335; Gregg, p. 80
- Luttrell, vol. II, p. 116; Weir, p. 268
- Chester, p. 230
- Green, pp. 62, 335; Luttrell, vol. II, p. 424; Weir, p. 268
- Gregg, p. 90
- Weir, p. 268; see also Green, p. 335; Gregg, p. 99; Luttrell, vol. III, p. 62
- Chester, p. 231
- Gregg, p. 100
- Weir, p. 269
- Luttrell, vol. III, p. 258
- Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 20
- Gregg, p. 107
- Green, p. 335
- Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 114; Gregg, p. 108
- Bickley, Francis (ed.) (1930). Historical Manuscripts Commission: The Hastings Manuscripts. London: HMSO, vol. II, p. 286
- Somerset, p. 152
- Green, p. 335; Gregg, p. 108; Somerset, p. 153
- Green, p. 335; Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 316
- Gregg, p. 116
- Somerset, p. 156
- Green, p. 335; Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 428; Weir, p. 269
- Luttrell, vol. IV, p. 607
- Gregg, p. 120
- Gregg, pp. x–xi; Somerset, pp. viii–ix
Sources
- Chester, Joseph Lemuel, ed. (1876), The Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, London: Harleian Society, OL 16339543M
- Curtis, Gila (1972), The Life and Times of Queen Anne, introduced by Antonia Fraser, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 0-2979-9571-5, OL 5457893M
- Green, David (1970), Queen Anne, London: Collins, ISBN 0-0021-1693-6
- Gregg, Edward (2001), Queen Anne (2nd ed.), New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-3000-9024-2, OL 3958275M
- Kendall, K. Limakatso (1991), Schofield, Mary Anne; Macheski, Cecilia (eds.), "Finding the Good Parts: Sexuality in Women's Tragedies in the Time of Queen Anne", Curtain Calls: British and American Women and the Theatre, 1660–1820, Athens: Ohio University Press, ISBN 0-8214-0957-3, OL 1883550M
- Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1999) [1981], Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (2nd ed.), London: Little, Brown, ISBN 978-0-3168-4820-6, OL 16165360M
- Luttrell, Narcissus (1857), A Brief Historical Relation of State Affairs from September 1678 to April 1714, Oxford: University Press, OL 23282860M
- Nenner, Howard (1998), The Right to be King: the Succession to the Crown of England, 1603–1714, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-3335-7724-8, OL 18675450M
- Pinches, John Harvey; Pinches, Rosemary (1974), "The Royal Heraldry of England", Heraldry Today, Slough, Buckinghamshire: Hollen Street Press, ISBN 0-9004-5525-X, OL 5114364M
- Somerset, Anne (2012), Queen Anne: The Politics of Passion, London: HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0-0072-0376-5, OL 30550898M
- Traub, Valerie (2002), The Renaissance of Lesbianism in Early Modern England, Cambridge: University Press, ISBN 0-5214-4427-6, OL 7741013M
- Waller, Maureen (2006), Sovereign Ladies: The Six Reigning Queens of England, London: John Murray, ISBN 0-7195-6628-2, OL 24198415M
- Ward, Adolphus W. (1885), 441–474 , in Stephen, Leslie (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 1, London: Smith, Elder & Co, pp.
- Ward, Adolphus W., ed. (1908), The Age of Louis XIV, The Cambridge Modern History, vol. V, Cambridge: University Press, OL 20479898M
- Weir, Alison (1995), Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, Revised Edition, London: Random House, ISBN 0-7126-7448-9, OL 7794712M
- Yorke, Philip Chesney (1911), Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 2 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 65–68 , in Chisholm, Hugh (ed.),
Further reading
- Bucholz, Robert O. (1991), "'Nothing but ceremony': Queen Anne and the limitations of royal ritual", Journal of British Studies, 30 (3): 288–323, doi:10.1086/385985, S2CID 143522370
- Harris, Frances (1993), "'The Honourable Sisterhood': Queen Anne's Maids of Honour", British Library Journal, 19 (2): 181–198, JSTOR 42554369
- Van Hensbergen, Claudine (2014), "Carving a Legacy: Public Sculpture of Queen Anne, c. 1704–1712" (PDF), Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, vol. 37, no. 2, pp. 229–244, archived (PDF) from the original on 20 July 2018
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4MFlTOURiMjF0YjI1ekxXeHZaMjh1YzNabkx6TXdjSGd0UTI5dGJXOXVjeTFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlpoTDFkcGEybHhkVzkwWlMxc2IyZHZMbk4yWnk4ek5IQjRMVmRwYTJseGRXOTBaUzFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Anne at the official website of the British monarchy
- Anne at the official website of the Royal Collection Trust
- Portraits of Queen Anne at the National Portrait Gallery, London
Anne 6 February 1665 1 August 1714 was Queen of England Scotland and Ireland from 8 March 1702 and Queen of Great Britain and Ireland following the ratification of the Acts of Union 1707 merging the kingdoms of Scotland and England until her death in 1714 AnnePortrait by Michael Dahl 1705Queen of England Scotland and Ireland more Reign8 March 1702 1 August 1714Coronation23 April 1702PredecessorWilliam IIISuccessorGeorge IBorn6 February 1665 St James s Palace Westminster EnglandDied1 August 1714 aged 49 Kensington Palace London EnglandBurial24 August 1714 Westminster AbbeySpousePrince George of Denmark m 1683 died 1708 wbr Issue more Prince William Duke of GloucesterHouseStuartFatherJames II of EnglandMotherAnne HydeReligionAnglicanismSignature Anne was born during the reign of her uncle King Charles II Her father was Charles s younger brother and heir presumptive James whose suspected Roman Catholicism was unpopular in England On Charles s instructions Anne and her elder sister Mary were raised as Anglicans Mary married their Dutch Protestant cousin William III of Orange in 1677 and Anne married the Lutheran Prince George of Denmark in 1683 On Charles s death in 1685 James succeeded to the throne but just three years later he was deposed in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 Mary and William became joint monarchs Although the sisters had been close disagreements over Anne s finances status and choice of acquaintances arose shortly after Mary s accession and they became estranged William and Mary had no children After Mary s death in 1694 William reigned alone until his own death in 1702 when Anne succeeded him During her reign Anne favoured moderate Tory politicians who were more likely to share her Anglican religious views than their opponents the Whigs The Whigs grew more powerful during the course of the War of the Spanish Succession until 1710 when Anne dismissed many of them from office Her close friendship with Sarah Churchill Duchess of Marlborough turned sour as the result of political differences The Duchess took revenge with an unflattering description of the Queen in her memoirs which was widely accepted by historians until Anne was reassessed in the late 20th century Anne was plagued by poor health throughout her life and from her thirties she grew increasingly ill and obese Despite 17 pregnancies she died without surviving issue and was the last monarch of the House of Stuart Under the Act of Settlement 1701 which excluded all Catholics she was succeeded by her second cousin George I of the House of Hanover Early lifeAnne centre and her sister Mary left with their parents the Duke and Duchess of York painted by Peter Lely and Benedetto Gennari II Anne was born at 11 39 p m on 6 February 1665 at St James s Palace London the fourth child and second daughter of the Duke of York later King James II and VII and his first wife Anne Hyde Her father was the younger brother of King Charles II who ruled the three kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland and her mother was the daughter of Lord Chancellor Edward Hyde 1st Earl of Clarendon At her Anglican baptism in the Chapel Royal at St James s her older sister Mary was one of her godparents along with the Duchess of Monmouth and the Archbishop of Canterbury Gilbert Sheldon Anne s parents had eight children but Anne and Mary were the only ones to survive into adulthood As a child Anne had an eye condition which manifested as excessive watering known as defluxion For medical treatment she was sent to France where she lived with her paternal grandmother Henrietta Maria of France at the Chateau de Colombes near Paris Following her grandmother s death in 1669 Anne lived with an aunt Henrietta Anne Duchess of Orleans On the sudden death of her aunt in 1670 Anne returned to England Her mother died the following year As was traditional in the royal family Anne and her sister were brought up separated from their father in their own establishment at Richmond in Surrey On the instructions of Charles II they were raised as Protestants despite their father being a Catholic Placed in the care of Colonel Edward and Lady Frances Villiers their education was focused on the teachings of the Anglican church Henry Compton Bishop of London was appointed as Anne s preceptor Around 1671 Anne first made the acquaintance of Sarah Jennings who later became her close friend and one of her most influential advisors Jennings married John Churchill the future Duke of Marlborough in about 1678 His sister Arabella was the Duke of York s mistress and he was to be Anne s most important general In 1673 James s conversion to Catholicism became public and he married a Catholic princess Mary of Modena who was only six and a half years older than Anne Charles II had no legitimate children and so James was next in the line of succession followed by his two surviving daughters from his first marriage Mary and Anne as long as he had no son Over the next ten years Mary of Modena had ten children but all were either stillborn or died in infancy leaving Mary and Anne second and third in the line of succession after their father There is every indication that throughout Anne s early life she and her stepmother got on well together and James was a conscientious and loving father MarriageAnne c 1684 painted by Willem Wissing and Jan van der Vaardt In November 1677 Anne s sister Mary married their Dutch first cousin William III of Orange at St James s Palace but Anne could not attend the wedding because she was confined to her room with smallpox By the time she recovered Mary had already left for her new life in the Netherlands Lady Frances Villiers contracted the disease and died Anne s aunt Lady Henrietta Hyde the wife of Laurence Hyde was appointed as her new governess A year later Anne and her stepmother visited Mary in Holland for two weeks The Duke and Duchess of York retired to Brussels in March 1679 in the wake of anti Catholic hysteria fed by the Popish Plot and Anne visited them from the end of August In October all three returned to Britain Anne to England and her father and stepmother to Scotland She joined them at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh from July 1681 until May 1682 It was her last journey outside England Anne s second cousin George of Hanover visited London for three months from December 1680 sparking rumours of a potential marriage between them Historian Edward Gregg dismissed the rumours as ungrounded as her father was essentially exiled from court and the Hanoverians planned to marry George to his first cousin Sophia Dorothea of Celle as part of a scheme to unite the Hanoverian inheritance Other rumours claimed she was courted by Lord Mulgrave although he denied it Nevertheless as a result of the gossip he was temporarily dismissed from court With George of Hanover out of contention as a suitor for Anne King Charles looked elsewhere for an eligible prince who would be welcomed as a groom by his Protestant subjects but also acceptable to his Catholic ally Louis XIV of France The Danes were Protestant allies of the French and Louis XIV was keen on an Anglo Danish alliance to contain the power of the Dutch A marriage treaty between Anne and Prince George of Denmark younger brother of King Christian V was negotiated by Anne s uncle Laurence Hyde who had been made Earl of Rochester and the English Secretary of State for the Northern Department Robert Spencer 2nd Earl of Sunderland Anne and George were second cousins once removed Anne s father consented to the marriage eagerly because it diminished the influence of his other son in law William of Orange who was naturally unhappy at the match Bishop Compton officiated at Anne and George s wedding on 28 July 1683 in the Chapel Royal at St James s Palace Although it was an arranged marriage they were faithful and devoted partners They were given a set of buildings known as the Cockpit in the Palace of Whitehall as their London residence and Sarah Churchill was appointed one of Anne s ladies of the bedchamber Within months of the marriage Anne was pregnant but the baby was stillborn in May Anne recovered at the spa town of Tunbridge Wells and over the next two years gave birth to two daughters in quick succession Mary and Anne Sophia Accession of James IIWhen Charles II died in 1685 Anne s father became King James II of England and VII of Scotland To the consternation of the English people James began to give Catholics military and administrative offices in contravention of the Test Acts that were designed to prevent such appointments Anne shared the general concern and continued to attend Anglican services As her sister Mary lived in the Netherlands Anne and her family were the only members of the royal family attending Protestant religious services in England When her father tried to get Anne to baptise her youngest daughter into the Catholic faith Anne burst into tears T he doctrine of the Church of Rome is wicked and dangerous she wrote to her sister their ceremonies most of them plain downright idolatry Anne became estranged from her father and stepmother as James moved to weaken the Church of England s power In early 1687 within a matter of days Anne miscarried her husband caught smallpox and their two young daughters died of the same infection Lady Rachel Russell wrote that George and Anne had taken the deaths very heavily Sometimes they wept sometimes they mourned in words then sat silent hand in hand he sick in bed and she the carefullest nurse to him that can be imagined Later that year she suffered another stillbirth Mary of Modena and James Francis Edward Anne s stepmother and half brother Public alarm at James s Catholicism increased when his wife Mary of Modena became pregnant for the first time since James s accession In letters to her sister Mary Anne raised suspicions that the Queen was faking her pregnancy in an attempt to introduce a false heir She wrote they will stick at nothing be it never so wicked if it will promote their interest there may be foul play intended Anne had another miscarriage in April 1688 and left London to recuperate in the spa town of Bath Anne s stepmother gave birth to a son James Francis Edward Stuart on 10 June 1688 and a Catholic succession became more likely Anne was still at Bath so she did not witness the birth which fed the belief that the child was spurious Anne may have left the capital deliberately to avoid being present or because she was genuinely ill but it is also possible that James desired the exclusion of all Protestants including his daughter from affairs of state I shall never now be satisfied Anne wrote to her sister Mary whether the child be true or false It may be it is our brother but God only knows one cannot help having a thousand fears and melancholy thoughts but whatever changes may happen you shall ever find me firm to my religion and faithfully yours To dispel rumours of a supposititious child James had 40 witnesses to the birth attend a Privy Council meeting but Anne claimed she could not attend because she was pregnant which she was not and then declined to read the depositions because it was not necessary Glorious RevolutionEngraving of William and Mary William of Orange invaded England on 5 November 1688 in an action known as the Glorious Revolution which ultimately deposed King James Forbidden by James to pay Mary a projected visit in the spring of 1687 Anne corresponded with her and was aware of the plans to invade On the advice of the Churchills she refused to side with James after William landed and instead wrote to William on 18 November declaring her approval of his action Churchill abandoned the unpopular King James on the 24th George followed suit that night and in the evening of the following day James issued orders to place Sarah Churchill under house arrest at St James s Palace Anne and Sarah fled from Whitehall by a back staircase putting themselves under the care of Bishop Compton They spent one night in his house and subsequently arrived at Nottingham on 1 December Two weeks later and escorted by a large company Anne arrived at Oxford where she met George in triumph God help me lamented James on discovering Anne s desertion on 26 November Even my children have forsaken me On 19 December Anne returned to London where she was at once visited by William James fled to France on the 23rd Anne showed no concern at the news of her father s flight and instead merely asked for her usual game of cards She justified herself by saying that she was used to play and never loved to do anything that looked like an affected constraint In January 1689 a Convention Parliament assembled in England and declared that James had effectively abdicated when he fled and that the thrones of England and Ireland were therefore vacant The Parliament or Estates of Scotland took similar action and William and Mary were declared monarchs of all three realms The Bill of Rights 1689 and Claim of Right Act 1689 settled the succession Anne and her descendants were to be in the line of succession after William and Mary and they were to be followed by any descendants of William by a future marriage On 24 July 1689 Anne gave birth to a son Prince William Duke of Gloucester who though ill survived infancy As William and Mary had no children it looked as though Anne s son would eventually inherit the Crown William and MarySoon after their accession William and Mary rewarded John Churchill by granting him the Earldom of Marlborough and George was made Duke of Cumberland Anne requested the use of Richmond Palace and a parliamentary allowance William and Mary refused the first and unsuccessfully opposed the latter both of which caused tension between the two sisters Anne s resentment grew worse when William refused to allow George to serve in the military in an active capacity The new king and queen feared that Anne s financial independence would weaken their influence over her and allow her to organise a rival political faction From around this time at Anne s request she and Sarah Churchill Lady Marlborough began to call each other the pet names Mrs Morley and Mrs Freeman respectively to facilitate a relationship of greater equality between the two when they were alone In January 1692 suspecting that Marlborough was secretly conspiring with James s followers the Jacobites William and Mary dismissed him from all his offices In a public show of support for the Marlboroughs Anne took Sarah to a social event at the palace and refused her sister s request to dismiss Sarah from her household Lady Marlborough was subsequently removed from the royal household by the Lord Chamberlain and Anne angrily left her royal lodgings and took up residence at Syon House the home of the Duke of Somerset Anne was stripped of her guard of honour courtiers were forbidden to visit her and civic authorities were instructed to ignore her In April Anne gave birth to a son who died within minutes Mary visited her but instead of offering comfort took the opportunity to berate Anne once again for her friendship with Sarah The sisters never saw each other again Later that year Anne moved to Berkeley House in Piccadilly London where she had a stillborn daughter in March 1693 When Mary died of smallpox in 1694 William continued to reign alone Anne became his heir apparent since any children he might have by another wife were assigned to a lower place in the line of succession and the two reconciled publicly He restored her previous honours allowed her to reside in St James s Palace and gave her Mary s jewels but excluded her from government and refrained from appointing her regent during his absences abroad Three months later William restored Marlborough to his offices With Anne s restoration at court Berkeley House became a social centre for courtiers who had previously avoided contact with Anne and her husband According to James Anne wrote to him in 1696 requesting his permission to succeed William and thereafter promising to restore the Crown to James s line at a convenient opportunity he declined to give his consent She was probably trying to ensure her own succession by attempting to prevent a direct claim by James Act of Settlement Anne with her son Prince William Duke of Gloucester in a painting from the school of Sir Godfrey Kneller circa 1694 Anne s final pregnancy ended on 25 January 1700 with a stillbirth She had been pregnant at least 17 times over as many years and had miscarried or given birth to stillborn children at least 12 times Of her five liveborn children four died before the age of two Anne experienced bouts of gout pains in her limbs and eventually stomach and head from at least 1698 Based on her foetal losses and physical symptoms she may have had systemic lupus erythematosus or antiphospholipid syndrome Alternatively pelvic inflammatory disease could explain why the onset of her symptoms roughly coincided with her penultimate pregnancy Other suggested causes of her failed pregnancies are listeriosis diabetes intrauterine growth retardation and rhesus incompatibility Rhesus incompatibility however generally worsens with successive pregnancies and so does not fit the pattern of Anne s pregnancies as her only son to survive infancy Prince William Duke of Gloucester was born after a series of stillbirths Experts also believe syphilis porphyria and pelvic deformation to be unlikely as the symptoms are incompatible with her medical history Anne s gout rendered her lame for much of her later life Around the court she was carried in a sedan chair or used a wheelchair Around her estates she used a one horse chaise which she drove herself furiously like Jehu and a mighty hunter like Nimrod She gained weight as a result of her sedentary lifestyle in Sarah s words she grew exceeding gross and corpulent There was something of majesty in her look but mixed with a gloominess of soul Sir John Clerk 1st Baronet described her in 1706 under a fit of the gout and in extreme pain and agony and on this occasion everything about her was much in the same disorder as about the meanest of her subjects Her face which was red and spotted was rendered something frightful by her negligent dress and the foot affected was tied up with a poultice and some nasty bandages I was much affected by this sight Anne s sole surviving child the Duke of Gloucester died at age 11 on 30 July 1700 She and her husband were overwhelmed with grief Anne ordered her household to observe a day of mourning every year on the anniversary of his death With William childless and Gloucester dead Anne was the only person remaining in the line of succession established by the Bill of Rights 1689 To address the succession crisis and preclude a Catholic restoration the Parliament of England enacted the Act of Settlement 1701 which provided that failing the issue of Anne and of William III by any future marriage the Crown of England and Ireland would go to Sophia Electress of Hanover and her Protestant descendants Sophia was the granddaughter of James VI and I through his daughter Elizabeth who was the sister of Anne s grandfather Charles I Over 50 Catholics with stronger claims were excluded from the line of succession Anne s father died in September 1701 His widow the former queen wrote to Anne to inform her that her father forgave her and to remind her of her promise to seek the restoration of his line but Anne had already acquiesced to the line of succession created by the Act of Settlement ReignPortrait by Charles Jervas Anne became queen upon the death of King William III on 8 March 1702 and was immediately popular In her first speech to the English Parliament on 11 March she distanced herself from her late Dutch brother in law and said As I know my heart to be entirely English I can very sincerely assure you there is not anything you can expect or desire from me which I shall not be ready to do for the happiness and prosperity of England Soon after her accession Anne appointed her husband Lord High Admiral giving him nominal control of the Royal Navy Anne gave control of the army to Lord Marlborough whom she appointed Captain General Marlborough also received numerous honours from the Queen he was created a Knight of the Garter and was elevated to the rank of duke The Duchess of Marlborough was appointed Groom of the Stool Mistress of the Robes and Keeper of the Privy Purse Anne was crowned on St George s Day 23 April 1702 Affected by gout she was carried to Westminster Abbey in an open sedan chair with a low back to permit her train to flow out behind her On 4 May England became embroiled in the War of the Spanish Succession in which England Austria and the Dutch Republic fought against France and Bourbon Spain Charles II of Spain had died childless in 1700 and the succession was disputed by two claimants the Habsburg Archduke Charles of Austria and the Bourbon Philip Duke of Anjou She took a lively interest in affairs of state and was a patron of theatre poetry and music She subsidised George Frideric Handel with 200 a year She sponsored high quality medals as rewards for political or military achievements They were produced at the Mint by Isaac Newton and John Croker She knighted Newton when she visited Cambridge in 1705 Acts of Union While Ireland was subordinate to the English Crown and Wales formed part of the kingdom of England Scotland remained an independent sovereign state with its own parliament and laws The Act of Settlement 1701 passed by the English Parliament applied in the kingdoms of England and Ireland but not Scotland where a strong minority wished to preserve the Stuart dynasty and its right of inheritance to the throne Anne had declared it very necessary to conclude a union of England and Scotland in her first speech to the English Parliament and a joint Anglo Scots commission met at her former residence the Cockpit to discuss terms in October 1702 The negotiations broke up in early February 1703 having failed to reach an agreement The Estates of Scotland responded to the Act of Settlement by passing the Act of Security which gave the Estates the power if the Queen had no further children to choose the next Scottish monarch from among the Protestant descendants of the royal line of Scotland The individual chosen by the Estates could not be the same person who came to the English throne unless England granted full freedom of trade to Scottish merchants At first Anne withheld royal assent to the act but she granted it the following year when the Estates threatened to withhold supply endangering Scottish support for England s wars Queen Anne addressing the House of Lords In its turn the English Parliament responded with the Alien Act 1705 which threatened to impose economic sanctions and declare Scottish subjects aliens in England unless Scotland either repealed the Act of Security or moved to unite with England The Estates chose the latter option the English Parliament agreed to repeal the Alien Act and new commissioners were appointed by Queen Anne in early 1706 to negotiate the terms of a union The articles of union approved by the commissioners were presented to Anne on 23 July 1706 and ratified by the Scottish and English Parliaments on 16 January and 6 March 1707 respectively Under the Acts of Union England and Scotland were united into a single kingdom called Great Britain with one parliament on 1 May 1707 A consistent and ardent supporter of union despite opposition on both sides of the border Anne attended a thanksgiving service in St Paul s Cathedral The Scot Sir John Clerk 1st Baronet who also attended wrote nobody on this occasion appeared more sincerely devout and thankful than the Queen herself Two party politics Portrait from the school of John Closterman circa 1702 Anne s reign was marked by the further development of a two party system In general the Tories were supportive of the Anglican church and favoured the landed interest of the country gentry while the Whigs were aligned with commercial interests and Protestant Dissenters As a committed Anglican Anne was inclined to favour the Tories Her first ministry was predominantly Tory and contained such High Tories as Daniel Finch 2nd Earl of Nottingham and her uncle Laurence Hyde 1st Earl of Rochester It was headed by Lord Treasurer Lord Godolphin and Anne s favourite the Duke of Marlborough who were considered moderate Tories along with the Speaker of the House of Commons Robert Harley Anne supported the Occasional Conformity Bill of 1702 which was promoted by the Tories and opposed by the Whigs The bill aimed to disqualify Protestant Dissenters from public office by closing a loophole in the Test Acts legislation that restricted public office to Anglican conformists The existing law permitted nonconformists to take office if they took Anglican communion once a year Anne s husband was placed in an unfortunate position when Anne forced him to vote for the bill even though being a Lutheran he was an occasional conformist himself The Whigs successfully blocked the bill for the duration of the parliamentary session Anne reinstituted the traditional religious practice of touching for the king s evil that had been eschewed by William as papist superstition After the Great Storm of 1703 Anne declared a general fast to implore God to pardon the crying sins of this nation which had drawn down this sad judgement The Occasional Conformity Bill was revived in the wake of the storm but Anne withheld support fearing its reintroduction was a ruse to cause a political quarrel Once again it failed A third attempt to introduce the bill as an amendment to a money bill in November 1704 was also thwarted The Whigs vigorously supported the War of the Spanish Succession and became even more influential after the Duke of Marlborough won a great victory at the Battle of Blenheim in 1704 Many of the High Tories who opposed British involvement in the land war against France were removed from office Godolphin Marlborough and Harley who had replaced Nottingham as Secretary of State for the Northern Department formed a ruling triumvirate They were forced to rely more and more on support from the Whigs and particularly from the Whig Junto Lords Somers Halifax Orford Wharton and Sunderland whom Anne disliked Sarah the Duchess of Marlborough incessantly badgered the Queen to appoint more Whigs and reduce the power of the Tories whom she considered little better than Jacobites and the Queen became increasingly discontented with her In 1706 Godolphin and the Marlboroughs forced Anne to accept Lord Sunderland a Junto Whig and the Marlboroughs son in law as Harley s colleague as Secretary of State for the Southern Department Although this strengthened the ministry s position in Parliament it weakened the ministry s position with the Queen as Anne became increasingly irritated with Godolphin and with her former favourite the Duchess of Marlborough for supporting Sunderland and other Whig candidates for vacant government and church positions The Queen turned for private advice to Harley who was uncomfortable with Marlborough and Godolphin s turn towards the Whigs She also turned to Abigail Hill a woman of the bedchamber whose influence grew as Anne s relationship with Sarah deteriorated Abigail was related to both Harley and the Duchess but was politically closer to Harley and acted as an intermediary between him and the Queen Half crown coin of Queen Anne 1708 The inscription reads in Latin ANNA DEI GRATIA Anne by the Grace of God The division within the ministry came to a head on 8 February 1708 when Godolphin and the Marlboroughs insisted that the Queen had to either dismiss Harley or do without their services When the Queen seemed to hesitate Marlborough and Godolphin refused to attend a cabinet meeting Harley attempted to lead business without his former colleagues and several of those present including Charles Seymour Duke of Somerset refused to participate until they returned Her hand forced the Queen dismissed Harley The following month Anne s Catholic half brother James Francis Edward Stuart attempted to land in Scotland with French assistance in an attempt to establish himself as king Anne withheld royal assent from the Scottish Militia Bill 1708 in case the militia raised in Scotland was disloyal and sided with the Jacobites She was the last British sovereign to veto a parliamentary bill although her action was barely commented upon at the time The invasion fleet never landed and was chased away by British ships commanded by Sir George Byng As a result of the Jacobite invasion scare support for the Tories fell and the Whigs were able to secure a majority in the 1708 British general election The Duchess of Marlborough was angered when Abigail moved into rooms at Kensington Palace that Sarah considered her own though she rarely if ever used them In July 1708 she came to court with a bawdy poem written by a Whig propagandist probably Arthur Maynwaring that implied a lesbian relationship between Anne and Abigail The Duchess wrote to Anne telling her she had damaged her reputation by conceiving a great passion for such a woman strange and unaccountable Sarah thought Abigail had risen above her station writing I never thought her education was such as to make her fit company for a great queen Many people have liked the humour of their chambermaids and have been very kind to them but tis very uncommon to hold a private correspondence with them and put them upon the foot of a friend While some modern commentators have concluded Anne was a lesbian most have rejected this analysis In the opinion of Anne s biographers she considered Abigail nothing more than a trusted servant and was a woman of strong traditional beliefs who was devoted to her husband At a thanksgiving service for a victory at the Battle of Oudenarde Anne did not wear the jewels that Sarah had selected for her At the door of St Paul s Cathedral they had an argument that culminated in Sarah offending the Queen by telling her to be quiet Anne was dismayed When Sarah forwarded an unrelated letter from her husband to Anne with a covering note continuing the argument Anne wrote back pointedly After the commands you gave me on the thanksgiving day of not answering you I should not have troubled you with these lines but to return the Duke of Marlborough s letter safe into your hands and for the same reason do not say anything to that nor to yours which enclosed it Death of Prince George Anne and George painted by Charles Boit 1706 Anne was devastated by Prince George s death in October 1708 and it proved a turning point in her relationship with the Duchess of Marlborough The Duchess arrived at Kensington Palace shortly before George died and after his death insisted that Anne leave Kensington for St James s Palace against her wishes Anne resented the Duchess s intrusive actions which included removing a portrait of George from the Queen s bedchamber and then refusing to return it in the belief that it was natural to avoid seeing of papers or anything that belonged to one that one loved when they were just dead The Whigs used George s death to their own advantage The leadership of the Admiralty was unpopular among the Whig leaders who had blamed Prince George and his deputy George Churchill who was Marlborough s brother for mismanagement of the navy With Whigs now dominant in Parliament and Anne distraught at the loss of her husband they forced her to accept the Junto leaders Lords Somers and Wharton into the cabinet Anne however insisted on carrying out the duties of Lord High Admiral herself without appointing a member of the government to take George s place Undeterred the Junto demanded the appointment of the Earl of Orford another member of the Junto and one of the prince s leading critics as First Lord of the Admiralty Anne appointed the moderate Earl of Pembroke on 29 November 1708 Pressure mounted on Pembroke Godolphin and the Queen from the dissatisfied Junto Whigs and Pembroke resigned after less than a year in office Another month of arguments followed before the Queen finally consented to put Orford in control of the Admiralty as First Lord in November 1709 Sarah continued to berate Anne for her friendship with Abigail and in October 1709 Anne wrote to the Duke of Marlborough asking that his wife leave off teasing amp tormenting me amp behave herself with the decency she ought both to her friend and Queen On Maundy Thursday 6 April 1710 Anne and Sarah saw each other for the last time According to Sarah the Queen was taciturn and formal repeating the same phrases Whatever you have to say you may put in writing and You said you desired no answer and I shall give you none over and over War of the Spanish Succession Allegory of the victory of the Grand Alliance at Schellenberg in 1704 The bust of Queen Anne at the top is surrounded by Allied leaders As the expensive War of the Spanish Succession grew unpopular so did the Whig administration The impeachment of Henry Sacheverell a high church Tory Anglican who had preached anti Whig sermons led to further public discontent Anne thought Sacheverell ought to be punished for questioning the Glorious Revolution but that his punishment should only be a mild one to prevent further public commotion In London riots broke out in support of Sacheverell but the only troops available to quell the disturbances were Anne s guards and Secretary of State Sunderland was reluctant to use them and leave the Queen less protected Anne declared God would be her guard and ordered Sunderland to redeploy her troops In line with Anne s views Sacheverell was convicted but his sentence suspension of preaching for three years was so light as to render the trial a mockery The Queen increasingly disdainful of the Marlboroughs and her ministry finally took the opportunity to dismiss Sunderland in June 1710 Godolphin followed in August The Junto Whigs were removed from office although Marlborough for the moment remained as commander of the army In their place she appointed a new ministry headed by Harley which began to seek peace with France Unlike the Whigs Harley and his ministry were ready to compromise by giving Spain to the Bourbon claimant Philip of Anjou in return for commercial concessions In the parliamentary elections that soon followed his appointment Harley aided by government patronage secured a large Tory majority In January 1711 Anne forced Sarah to resign her court offices and Abigail took over as Keeper of the Privy Purse Harley was stabbed by a disgruntled French refugee the Marquis de Guiscard in March and Anne wept at the thought he would die He recovered slowly Godolphin s death from natural causes in September 1712 reduced Anne to tears she blamed their estrangement on the Marlboroughs Tinted engraving of Anne from an atlas commissioned by Augustus the Strong 1707 The elder brother of Archduke Charles Emperor Joseph I died in April 1711 and Charles succeeded him in Austria Hungary and the Holy Roman Empire To also give him the Spanish throne was no longer in Britain s interests but the proposed Peace of Utrecht submitted to Parliament for ratification did not go as far as the Whigs wanted to curb Bourbon ambitions In the House of Commons the Tory majority was unassailable but the same was not true in the House of Lords The Whigs secured the support of the Earl of Nottingham against the treaty by promising to support his Occasional Conformity bill Seeing a need for decisive action to erase the anti peace majority in the House of Lords and seeing no alternative Anne reluctantly created twelve new peers even though such a mass creation of peers was unprecedented Abigail s husband Samuel Masham was made a baron although Anne protested to Harley that she never had any design to make a great lady of Abigail and should lose a useful servant On the same day Marlborough was dismissed as commander of the army The peace treaty was ratified and Britain s military involvement in the War of the Spanish Succession ended By signing the Treaty of Utrecht Louis XIV of France recognised the Hanoverian succession in Britain Nevertheless gossip that Anne and her ministers favoured the succession of her half brother rather than the Hanoverians continued despite Anne s denials in public and in private The rumours were fed by her consistent refusals to permit any of the Hanoverians to visit or move to England and by the intrigues of Harley and the Tory Secretary of State Lord Bolingbroke who were in separate and secret discussions with her half brother about a possible Stuart restoration until early 1714 Death Anne was unable to walk between January and July 1713 At Christmas she was feverish and lay unconscious for hours leading to rumours of her impending death She recovered but was seriously ill again in March By July Anne had lost confidence in Harley his secretary recorded that Anne told the cabinet that he neglected all business that he was seldom to be understood that when he did explain himself she could not depend upon the truth of what he said that he never came to her at the time she appointed that he often came drunk and last to crown all he behaved himself towards her with ill manner indecency and disrespect On 27 July 1714 during Parliament s summer recess she dismissed Harley as Lord Treasurer Despite failing health which her doctors blamed on the emotional strain of matters of state she attended two late night cabinet meetings that failed to determine Harley s successor A third meeting was cancelled when she became too ill to attend She was rendered unable to speak by a stroke on 30 July 1714 the anniversary of Gloucester s death and on the advice of the Privy Council handed the treasurer s staff of office to Whig grandee Charles Talbot 1st Duke of Shrewsbury Anne died around 7 30 a m on 1 August 1714 John Arbuthnot one of her doctors thought her death was a release from a life of ill health and tragedy he wrote to Jonathan Swift I believe sleep was never more welcome to a weary traveller than death was to her She was buried beside her husband and children in the Henry VII Chapel on the South Aisle of Westminster Abbey on 24 August Succession The Electress Sophia had died on 28 May two months before Anne so the Electress s son George Elector of Hanover succeeded pursuant to the Act of Settlement 1701 The possible Catholic claimants including Anne s half brother James Francis Edward Stuart were ignored The Elector s accession was relatively stable a Jacobite rising in 1715 failed Marlborough was reinstated and the Tory ministers were replaced by Whigs LegacyStatue of Anne in front of St Paul s Cathedral London A High Tory political opponent wrote that it was fitting she was depicted with her rump to the church gazing longingly into a wineshop The Duchess of Marlborough unduly disparaged Anne in her memoirs and her prejudiced recollections persuaded many early biographers that Anne was a weak irresolute woman beset by bedchamber quarrels and deciding high policy on the basis of personalities The Duchess wrote of Anne She certainly meant well and was not a fool but nobody can maintain that she was wise nor entertaining in conversation She was ignorant in everything but what the parsons had taught her when a child Being very ignorant very fearful with very little judgement it is easy to be seen she might mean well being surrounded with so many artful people who at last compassed their designs to her dishonour Historians have since viewed Anne more favourably In his biography of 1980 Edward Gregg presents the Queen as a woman of invincible stubbornness who was the central figure of her age Gregg s argument depicts her reign as a period of significant progress for the country Britain became a major military power on land the union of England and Scotland created a united kingdom of Great Britain and the economic and political base for the golden age of the 18th century was established However the Queen herself has received little credit for these achievements and has long been depicted as a weak and ineffectual monarch dominated by her advisers In the opinion of modern historians traditional assessments of Anne as fat constantly pregnant under the influence of favourites and lacking political astuteness or interest may derive from sexist prejudices against women Author David Green noted Hers was not as used to be supposed petticoat government She had considerable power yet time and time again she had to capitulate Gregg concluded that Anne was often able to impose her will even though as a woman in an age of male dominance and preoccupied by her health her reign was marked by an increase in the influence of ministers and a decrease in the influence of the Crown She attended more cabinet meetings than any of her predecessors or successors and presided over an age of artistic literary scientific economic and political advancement that was made possible by the stability and prosperity of her reign In architecture Sir John Vanbrugh constructed Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard Queen Anne style architecture and Queen Anne style furniture were named after her Writers such as Daniel Defoe Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift flourished Henry Wise laid out new gardens at Blenheim Kensington Windsor and St James s The union of England and Scotland which Anne had fervently supported created Europe s largest free trade area The political and diplomatic achievements of Anne s governments and the absence of constitutional conflict between monarch and parliament during her reign indicate that she chose ministers and exercised her prerogatives wisely Titles styles honours and armsTitles and styles 6 February 1665 28 July 1683 Her Highness The Lady Anne 28 July 1683 8 March 1702 Her Royal Highness The Princess Anne of Denmark 8 March 1702 1 August 1714 Her Majesty The Queen The official style of Anne before 1707 was Anne by the Grace of God Queen of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith etc After the union her style was Anne by the Grace of God Queen of Great Britain France and Ireland Defender of the Faith etc In line with other monarchs of England between 1340 and 1800 Anne was styled Queen of France but did not actually reign in France Arms As queen regnant Anne s coat of arms before the union were the Stuart royal arms in use since 1603 Quarterly I and IV grandquarterly Azure three fleurs de lis Or for France and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or for England II Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory counter flory Gules for Scotland III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent for Ireland In 1702 Anne adopted the motto semper eadem always the same the same motto used by Queen Elizabeth I The Acts of Union declared that the Ensigns Armorial of the said United Kingdom be such as Her Majesty shall appoint In 1707 the union was heraldically expressed by the impalement or placing side by side in the same quarter of the arms of England and Scotland which had previously been in different quarters The new arms were Quarterly I and IV Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or for England impaling Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory counter flory Gules for Scotland II Azure three fleurs de lis Or for France III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent for Ireland In Scotland a separate form of arms was used on seals until the Act of Union Coat of arms of Anne as Princess of Denmark Coat of arms of Anne as Queen of England from 1702 to 1707 Coat of arms of Anne as Queen of Great Britain from 1707 to 1714Pregnancies and issueAnne had seventeen pregnancies of which five were live births None of her children survived to adulthood Child Birth Death Burial NotesStillborn daughter 12 May 1684 London 13 May 1684 Westminster AbbeyMary 2 June 1685 Palace of Whitehall 8 February 1687 Windsor Castle 10 February 1687 Westminster Abbey Christened 2 June 1685 by the Bishop of London styled the Lady Mary Died of smallpox Mary Anne Sophia Mary s younger sister and their father all becoming ill at Windsor Castle in early 1687 Anne Sophia 12 May 1686 Windsor Castle 2 February 1687 Windsor Castle or Whitehall 4 February 1687 Westminster Abbey Christened by the Bishop of Durham with Lady Churchill one of the godmothers styled the Lady Anne Sophia Miscarriage 21 January 1687Stillborn son 22 October 1687 Whitehall 22 October 1687 Westminster Abbey Anne gave birth at seven months but the baby lay dead a full month within her Miscarriage 16 April 1688Prince William Duke of Gloucester 24 July 1689 Hampton Court Palace 30 July 1700 Windsor Castle 9 August 1700 Westminster Abbey Died of unclear causes at age 11 Mary 14 October 1690 St James s Palace 14 October 1690 Westminster Abbey She was two months premature and lived about two hours George 17 April 1692 Syon House 18 April 1692 Westminster Abbey He lived only for a few minutes just long enough to be baptised styled Lord George Stillborn daughter 23 March 1693 Berkeley House 24 March 1693 Westminster AbbeyMiscarriage 21 January 1694 Modern historians Edward Gregg and Alison Weir do not agree on whether it was a son or possibly a daughter Contemporary chronicler Narcissus Luttrell wrote only that Anne miscarried of a dead child Miscarried daughter 17 or 18 February 1696Miscarriage 20 September 1696 Luttrell said Anne miscarried of a son Nathaniel Johnston told Theophilus Hastings 7th Earl of Huntingdon in a letter dated 24 October 1696 Her Royal Highness miscarried of two children the one of seven months growth the other of two or three months as her physicians and midwife judged one was born the day after the other If so the smaller foetus was probably a blighted twin or fetus papyraceus Miscarriage 25 March 1697Miscarriage early December 1697 According to Sauniere de L Hermitage the Dutch resident in London Anne miscarried twins who were too early to determine their sex Other sources say the pregnancy ended in a stillborn son or two male children at least as far as could be recognised Stillborn son 15 September 1698 Windsor Castle St George s Chapel Windsor Castle James Vernon wrote to Charles Talbot 1st Duke of Shrewsbury that Anne s physician thought the foetus might have been dead 8 or 10 days Stillborn son 24 January 1700 St James s Westminster Abbey Contemporary sources say Anne gave birth at seven and a half months after the foetus had been dead for a month Genealogical tablevteThe British monarchs of the House of Stuart their relations and the transition to the HanoversJames VI and I 1566 1625 r 1567 1603 1625Henrietta Maria 1609 1669Charles I 1600 1649 r 1625 1649Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia 1596 1662Frederick V of the Palatinate 1596 1632Charles II 1630 1685 r 1660 1685Mary Princess Royal and Princess of Orange 1631 1660Anne Hyde 1637 1671James II and VII 1633 1701 r 1685 1688Mary of Modena 1658 1718Sophia of Hanover 1630 1714Ernest Augustus Elector of Hanover 1629 1698James Scott 1st Duke of Monmouth 1649 1685William III 1650 1702 r 1689 1702Mary II 1662 1694 r 1689 1694Anne 1665 1714 r 1702 1714James Francis Edward Stuart the Old Pretender 1688 1766Louisa Maria Stuart 1692 1712George I 1660 1727 r 1714 1727Prince William Duke of Gloucester 1689 1700Charles Edward Stuart the Young Pretender 1720 1788Henry Benedict Stuart Duke of York 1725 1807George II 1683 1760 r 1727 1760See alsoMonarchy portalEarly 18th century Whig plots Queen Anne s Bounty 1704 financial scheme in support of poorer clergy Queen Anne s Revenge 18th century pirate shipNotesQueen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1 May 1707 All dates in this article are in the Old Style Julian calendar used in Great Britain throughout Anne s lifetime except that years are assumed to start on 1 January rather than 25 March which was the English New Year Professor Valerie Traub writes Although this scandal features prominently in biographies of the Queen the charges generally are dismissed as the hysterical vindictiveness of a power hungry Duchess 8 June in the New Style Gregorian calendar in use in Hanover since 1700 ReferencesCitations Curtis pp 12 17 Gregg p 4 Gregg p 4 Green p 17 Gregg p 6 Waller pp 293 295 Curtis pp 19 21 Green p 20 Gregg p 6 Curtis pp 21 23 Gregg p 8 Somerset pp 11 13 Waller p 295 Gregg p 5 Curtis pp 23 24 Gregg p 13 Somerset p 20 Green p 21 Gregg p 5 Curtis p 28 Gregg p 13 Waller p 296 Somerset p 20 Curtis p 27 Green p 21 Gregg p 28 Curtis p 34 Green p 29 Gregg p 28 Weir pp 260 261 Somerset pp 22 23 Somerset pp 8 9 Curtis p 30 Green p 27 Gregg p 17 Green p 28 Gregg p 17 Somerset p 29 Green p 28 Gregg p 20 Green p 29 Gregg p 22 Somerset p 34 Green p 32 Gregg p 26 Somerset p 35 Green p 28 Curtis pp 35 37 Green p 31 Gregg p 24 Somerset pp 34 36 Gregg pp 24 25 Curtis p 37 Green pp 32 33 Gregg p 27 Somerset p 37 Somerset p 40 Gregg p 32 Gregg p 33 Somerset pp 41 42 Gregg pp 33 34 Somerset p 43 Curtis pp 41 42 Green pp 34 35 Gregg pp 32 35 Somerset p 44 Curtis p 42 Green p 34 Gregg p 35 Somerset pp 41 44 Curtis p 43 Green p 36 Gregg p 34 Somerset p 49 Gregg p 36 Somerset p 56 Weir p 268 Somerset pp 61 64 Waller p 300 Green p 38 Quoted in Green p 39 Gregg p 43 and Somerset p 21 Somerset pp 65 74 77 Green p 39 Gregg p 47 Waller p 301 Curtis p 55 Gregg p 52 Somerset pp 80 82 Letter dated 14 March 1688 quoted in Gregg p 54 and Waller p 303 Somerset pp 86 87 Waller pp 303 304 Ward pp 241 242 Waller p 304 Nenner p 243 Yorke pp 65 68 Quoted in Green p 43 Somerset p 95 Gregg pp 62 63 Waller p 305 Green p 39 Gregg p 47 Somerset p 74 Gregg p 60 Green p 47 Gregg p 63 Gregg p 64 Gregg p 65 Gregg pp 65 66 Green pp 45 47 Gregg p 67 Gregg p 66 Gregg p 68 Somerset p 105 Lord Clarendon s diary quoted in Green p 49 Ward pp 250 251 291 292 Green p 52 Gregg p 69 Curtis p 72 Green pp 54 55 Green pp 53 54 Gregg pp 76 79 Curtis pp 75 76 Green p 58 Gregg p 80 Gregg pp 78 79 Gregg p 81 Somerset p 52 Gregg p 81 Somerset p 124 Curtis pp 78 80 Green pp 59 60 Gregg pp 84 87 Somerset pp 130 132 Green p 62 Gregg p 87 Somerset p 132 Green p 62 Gregg pp 88 91 96 Curtis p 81 Green pp 62 63 Gregg p 90 Somerset pp 134 135 Somerset p 146 Curtis p 84 Green pp 66 67 Gregg pp 102 103 Somerset p 149 Gregg pp 105 106 Somerset pp 151 152 Gregg p 104 Somerset p 151 Gregg p 108 Somerset pp 153 154 Gregg p 122 Green p 335 Gregg pp 100 120 Weir pp 268 269 Green pp 79 336 Emson H E 23 May 1992 For The Want Of An Heir The Obstetrical History Of Queen Anne British Medical Journal vol 304 no 6838 pp 1365 1366 subscription required Somerset pp 80 295 Green p 338 Saxbe W B Jr January 1972 Listeria monocytogenes and Queen Anne Pediatrics vol 49 no 1 pp 97 101 Waller p 310 Green pp 337 338 Somerset p 79 Waller pp 310 311 Curtis pp 47 49 Green pp 337 338 Curtis p 84 Gregg p 330 Jonathan Swift quoted in Green pp 101 102 and Gregg p 343 Green p 154 Curtis p 146 Green pp 154 155 Gregg p 231 Luttrell vol IV p 674 Somerset p 163 Green p 80 Somerset p 165 Green pp 86 87 Waller p 312 Green p 90 Waller p 312 Green p 91 Waller p 313 Green p 94 Gregg p 160 Green p 94 Somerset p 174 Waller p 315 Ward p 460 Green p 95 Waller p 314 Curtis p 97 Green pp 95 96 Gregg p 154 Somerset p 187 Curtis p 97 Green p 96 Green p 97 Gregg p 158 Curtis p 101 Green pp 85 86 Gregg p 125 Somerset pp 229 230 Hone Joseph 2016 Isaac Newton and the Medals for Queen Anne Huntington Library Quarterly 79 1 119 148 doi 10 1353 hlq 2016 0003 S2CID 155499114 Gregg p 197 Gregg pp 130 131 Somerset p 212 Somerset p 214 Negotiations for Union 1702 03 UK Parliament Retrieved 9 March 2013 Curtis p 145 Somerset p 257 Green p 133 Somerset pp 269 270 Green p 134 Somerset pp 277 278 Somerset p 296 Gregg pp 202 214 Somerset p 297 Gregg p 239 Somerset pp 315 316 Gregg p 240 Clerk s memoirs quoted in Gregg p 240 and Somerset pp 316 317 Curtis pp 102 104 Gregg pp 133 134 Somerset pp 189 199 Somerset pp 201 203 Waller p 318 Gregg p 135 Curtis p 107 Green pp 108 109 Gregg pp 162 163 Green p 105 Somerset p 226 Waller pp 316 317 Green p 121 Green p 122 Curtis p 116 Green p 122 Gregg p 177 Gregg pp 192 194 Somerset pp 275 276 Gregg p 196 Green p 129 Curtis pp 134 138 139 Green pp 117 155 172 Gregg pp 134 218 219 Gregg pp 174 175 188 193 Somerset pp 245 246 258 272 274 Green p 155 Gregg pp 219 230 Somerset pp 301 311 Green p 156 Gregg pp 230 231 241 246 Somerset pp 318 321 Curtis p 152 Green pp 166 168 Waller p 324 Gregg p 236 237 Somerset p 324 Green pp 182 183 Gregg pp 258 259 Somerset pp 340 341 Green p 183 Gregg p 259 Somerset p 341 Curtis p 157 Green p 186 Gregg pp 261 262 Somerset p 343 Curtis p 157 Curtis p 157 Gregg p 144 Curtis p 158 Green p 186 Gregg p 262 Somerset p 345 Gregg p 263 Gregg pp 273 274 Somerset pp 347 348 Gregg p 275 Somerset p 361 Gregg pp 275 276 Somerset pp 360 361 Waller pp 324 325 Gregg pp 275 276 Somerset p 362 Waller pp 324 325 Somerset pp 353 354 e g Kendall pp 165 176 Traub p 157 Gregg p 237 Somerset p 363 Somerset pp 363 364 Curtis pp 162 163 Green pp 195 196 Gregg p 276 Somerset pp 364 365 Curtis pp 163 164 Green p 196 Gregg p 277 Somerset p 365 Curtis pp 163 164 Green p 196 Gregg p 277 Curtis pp 165 168 Green p 198 Gregg p 280 Somerset pp 372 374 Green p 199 Somerset p 370 Green p 202 Green pp 175 176 Gregg pp 254 266 Gregg p 284 Green pp 210 214 Gregg pp 292 294 Somerset pp 389 390 Waller p 325 Curtis p 173 Green pp 307 308 Gregg pp 221 222 Gregg p 298 Green pp 217 218 Gregg pp 305 306 Green p 220 Gregg p 306 Somerset pp 403 404 Curtis p 176 Gregg pp 313 314 Somerset pp 414 415 Gregg p 335 Gregg pp 322 324 Green pp 238 241 Gregg pp 328 331 Somerset pp 435 437 Green p 244 Gregg p 337 Somerset pp 439 440 Green p 274 Gregg pp 337 343 Curtis p 189 Green p 258 Gregg p 343 Somerset pp 458 460 Curtis p 190 Green p 263 Gregg pp 349 351 Somerset pp 463 465 Green p 263 Somerset p 465 Gregg pp 349 351 Somerset pp 464 465 Green p 263 Gregg p 350 Gregg pp 358 361 Gregg p 361 Green pp 272 284 Gregg pp 363 366 Curtis p 193 Gregg pp 375 377 Somerset pp 505 507 Curtis p 193 Green p 282 Curtis p 193 Green pp 294 295 Green p 296 Gregg p 374 Somerset p 502 Green p 300 Gregg p 378 Harley s secretary Erasmus Lewis writing to Jonathan Swift quoted in Gregg p 391 and Somerset p 524 Green p 318 Gregg pp 390 391 Gregg pp 391 392 Somerset pp 525 526 Green pp 321 322 Somerset p 527 Waller p 328 Gregg pp 392 394 Somerset p 528 Quoted in Gregg p 394 No 5254 The London Gazette 24 August 1714 p 1 Curtis p 201 Green p 327 Gregg p 399 Somerset p 501 Gregg p 401 Green p 330 Hensbergen Claudine Bernard Stephen 2014 Introduction Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies vol 37 no 2 p 140 Waller p 313 see also Somerset pp 541 543 for a similar view Green p 14 Gregg p 404 Green p 97 Gregg p 141 Curtis p 204 Curtis pp 124 131 Gregg p 132 Curtis pp 131 136 137 Gregg p 405 Quick Guide Act of Union BBC News 15 January 2007 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Waller pp 313 317 328 No 1065 The London Gazette 31 January 1675 p 2 No 1143 The London Gazette 30 October 1676 p 1 No 2361 The London Gazette 5 July 1688 p 1 No 2365 The London Gazette 19 July 1688 p 2 Wallis John Eyre Winstanley 1921 English Regnal Years and Titles Hand lists Easter dates etc London Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge pp 62 63 Weir p 286 Pinches and Pinches pp 194 195 Union with England Act 1707 Section I The National Archives Retrieved 26 March 2013 Union with England Act 1707 Section XXIV The National Archives Retrieved 26 March 2013 Green p 335 Gregg p 36 Somerset p 56 Weir p 268 Chester p 209 No 2216 The London Gazette 10 14 February 1686 p 2 Chester p 217 Ward pp 441 474 Gregg pp 46 47 No 2214 The London Gazette 3 7 February 1686 p 2 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series James II 1964 London HMSO vol II p 347 Gregg p 46 Somerset p 71 Weir p 268 Gregg p 52 Chester p 219 Weir p 268 Green p 335 Gregg p 55 Somerset p 86 Weir p 268 Green pp 54 335 Gregg pp 72 120 Weir p 268 Chester pp 246 247 Waller Maureen 2002 Ungrateful daughters the Stuart princesses who stole their father s crown Hodder amp Stoughton p 352 ISBN 0 340 79461 5 Chester p 226 Green p 335 Gregg p 80 Luttrell vol II p 116 Weir p 268 Chester p 230 Green pp 62 335 Luttrell vol II p 424 Weir p 268 Gregg p 90 Weir p 268 see also Green p 335 Gregg p 99 Luttrell vol III p 62 Chester p 231 Gregg p 100 Weir p 269 Luttrell vol III p 258 Luttrell vol IV p 20 Gregg p 107 Green p 335 Luttrell vol IV p 114 Gregg p 108 Bickley Francis ed 1930 Historical Manuscripts Commission The Hastings Manuscripts London HMSO vol II p 286 Somerset p 152 Green p 335 Gregg p 108 Somerset p 153 Green p 335 Luttrell vol IV p 316 Gregg p 116 Somerset p 156 Green p 335 Luttrell vol IV p 428 Weir p 269 Luttrell vol IV p 607 Gregg p 120 Gregg pp x xi Somerset pp viii ix Sources Chester Joseph Lemuel ed 1876 The Marriage Baptismal and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St Peter Westminster London Harleian Society OL 16339543M Curtis Gila 1972 The Life and Times of Queen Anne introduced by Antonia Fraser London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 2979 9571 5 OL 5457893M Green David 1970 Queen Anne London Collins ISBN 0 0021 1693 6 Gregg Edward 2001 Queen Anne 2nd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 3000 9024 2 OL 3958275M Kendall K Limakatso 1991 Schofield Mary Anne Macheski Cecilia eds Finding the Good Parts Sexuality in Women s Tragedies in the Time of Queen Anne Curtain Calls British and American Women and the Theatre 1660 1820 Athens Ohio University Press ISBN 0 8214 0957 3 OL 1883550M Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1999 1981 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe 2nd ed London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 3168 4820 6 OL 16165360M Luttrell Narcissus 1857 A Brief Historical Relation of State Affairs from September 1678 to April 1714 Oxford University Press OL 23282860M Nenner Howard 1998 The Right to be King the Succession to the Crown of England 1603 1714 Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 3335 7724 8 OL 18675450M Pinches John Harvey Pinches Rosemary 1974 The Royal Heraldry of England Heraldry Today Slough Buckinghamshire Hollen Street Press ISBN 0 9004 5525 X OL 5114364M Somerset Anne 2012 Queen Anne The Politics of Passion London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 0072 0376 5 OL 30550898M Traub Valerie 2002 The Renaissance of Lesbianism in Early Modern England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 5214 4427 6 OL 7741013M Waller Maureen 2006 Sovereign Ladies The Six Reigning Queens of England London John Murray ISBN 0 7195 6628 2 OL 24198415M Ward Adolphus W 1885 Anne 1665 1714 in Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography vol 1 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 441 474 Ward Adolphus W ed 1908 The Age of Louis XIV The Cambridge Modern History vol V Cambridge University Press OL 20479898M Weir Alison 1995 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised Edition London Random House ISBN 0 7126 7448 9 OL 7794712M Yorke Philip Chesney 1911 Anne Queen of Great Britain and Ireland in Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 65 68Further readingBucholz Robert O 1991 Nothing but ceremony Queen Anne and the limitations of royal ritual Journal of British Studies 30 3 288 323 doi 10 1086 385985 S2CID 143522370 Harris Frances 1993 The Honourable Sisterhood Queen Anne s Maids of Honour British Library Journal 19 2 181 198 JSTOR 42554369 Van Hensbergen Claudine 2014 Carving a Legacy Public Sculpture of Queen Anne c 1704 1712 PDF Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies vol 37 no 2 pp 229 244 archived PDF from the original on 20 July 2018External linksListen to this article 23 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 3 May 2005 2005 05 03 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anne of Great Britain Wikiquote has quotations related to Anne of Great Britain Anne at the official website of the British monarchy Anne at the official website of the Royal Collection Trust Portraits of Queen Anne at the National Portrait Gallery LondonAnneHouse of StuartBorn 6 February 1665 Died 1 August 1714Regnal titlesPreceded byWilliam III amp II Queen of England and Scotland 1702 1707 Acts of Union 1707Queen of Ireland 1702 1714 Succeeded byGeorge IActs of Union 1707 Queen of Great Britain 1707 1714Political officesPreceded byPrince George of Denmark Lord High Admiral 1708 Succeeded byThe Earl of Pembroke